www.sundaytimes.lk
ISSN: 1391 - 0531
Sunday, July 15, 2007
Vol. 42 - No 07
International  

Waiting in line for 11 days to get new Harry Potter book

ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Saturday (AP) – Forget waiting around a mere few days for an iPhone. Two sisters are in the midst of an 11-day vigil for this summer's hottest, ''must have'' low-tech phenomenon: the latest Harry Potter book. Chloe and Sydney Bostian started camping out Tuesday in front of Gulliver's Books in Fairbanks to be among the first in their area to find out their hero's fate in ''Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.''

Cover of the latest Harry Potter book

The seventh and final Harry Potter novel from author J.K. Rowling will be released at midnight, July 21.

What sort of sorcery could make teenage girls live outside a bookstore in this far northern state for 11 days? ''It's just so addicting. You think you have it all figured out and then everything switches up on you,'' said Chloe, 18. ''It's the big finale, and all the questions are going to be answered.'' They have reserved four copies of the book, but the wait is not about that. They wanted to beat their friend, Graham Tordoff, 18, to the front of the line.

''He beat me once and I've been in line first ever since,'' Chloe said. ''We're pretty die-hard.'' The girls are living out of their parents' camper, parked in the bookstore's parking lot. During the day their parents _ who are taking turns staying with them _ move it to the customer parking area, but at night it comes right up to the store entrance _ the front of the line.

To help pass time, they browse the bookstore and friends bring them food so they do not have to leave the line. To refresh their memories, they're planning to watch the Harry Potter movies on a laptop computer and they playing trivia games, based on Harry Potter tales, of course.

''It's just really fun and people come by and talk to you,'' said Sydney, 11. ''The excitement just builds as it gets closer.'' Tordoff, who has known Chloe since they were toddlers, has pre-ordered two copies of the book. He got in line after the girls and plans to be there sporadically _ he has a job _ until the release.

''Chloe and her sister were first, I suppose. It's depressing,'' he said, laughing. ''She earned it; she's good.'' Maria Papp, manager of Gulliver's Books, said the releases of the last Harry Potter book only drew crowds about three days before its it came out. ''They took us totally by surprise,'' she said of the sisters taking up residence outside her store. ''These gals will be the first ones in the door and I'm sure they'll be pretty ready to go home by then.''

She said the store will have more than enough Potter books to go around, so there's no need to panic. Publisher Scholastic Corp. is printing 12 million copies of the final installment, a series record, said spokeswoman Kyle Good. Printing has been on the rise with every book, she said, up from 50,000 copies printed on the first run of the first novel, ''Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone.'' There are 121.5 million copies of all the books in circulation throughout the U.S., she said.

Amazon.com Inc. said more than 2 million people worldwide have pre-ordered ''Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows,'' the seventh and final volume in J. K. Rowling's series. In the United States, the Web retailer said the book has logged more than 1.2 million pre-orders, breaking the company's record of 919,000 set by the previous installment.

 
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Copyright 2007 Wijeya Newspapers Ltd.Colombo. Sri Lanka.