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Rowling Stands Up For Authors' Rights

In an angry outburst on the final day of trial over the unauthorised Harry Potter encyclopaedia, Ms Rowling said, ''Are we the owners of our own work?'' The author is trying to block publication of 'The Harry Potter Lexicon', a guide to the characters, places and spells in her novels, which was written by Steven Vander Ar, a passionate Harry Potter fan.
She
told
US
District
Judge
Robert
Patterson
Jr
that
she
was
''vehemently
anti-censorship,''
and
generally
supportive
of
the
right
of
other
authors
to
write
books
about
her
novels.
Vander
Ark
had
''plundered''
her
prose
and
merely
reprinted
it
in
an
A-to-Z
format.
Ms Rowling said she did not think anyone would read the lexicon and its list of facts about the wizard world for ''entertainment value,'' adding that the good parts had simply been lifted from her own work.
RDR Books, a small publisher which created a book from a website, has argued that it is little different than any other reference guide to an important novel, and should be allowed to go to press without interference.
A literature professor from the University of California, called by RDR Books, told the court that reference guides helped readers navigate jargon-packed fantasy novels.
Lawyers now have several weeks to file legal documents before a verdict is considered, according to a Daily Telegraph report.



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