An 800-word prequel to the Harry Potter series, handwritten by author J.K.
Rowling, sold for 25,000 pounds (US$49,323) at an auction Tuesday.
An absent bidder paid more than 30 pounds per word for Rowling's short story
at a charity auction at the flagship of Waterstone's book store chain in London.
Proceeds will benefit the writers' association English PEN and a dyslexia
charity.
A short mystery story by acclaimed playwright Tom Stoppard raised 4,000
pounds.
Rowling was able to squeeze her Harry Potter prequel onto both sides of a
piece of A5 paper, which is slightly bigger than a postcard.
The prequel to the seven-book series is set three years before Harry is born
and features the characters Sirius Black and James Potter, Harry's father. They
get into trouble with a policeman before escaping with broomsticks, drumsticks
and a little bit of magic.
Rowling made it clear there was no hope for a new Potter novel and finished
her card by writing, "From the prequel I am not working on _ but that was fun!"
Twelve other authors and illustrators also contributed cards to the auction,
including Nobel Prize winner Doris Lessing, and fellow British novelists Nick
Hornby and Margaret Atwood.
Copies of all the cards will be on display in Waterstone's stores and online
following the auction, and they will be collected into a book available in
August.
The final installment of the seven-book series, "Harry Potter and the Deathly
Hallows," was published last year.
Rowling has said she has no plans to write another novel about the boy
wizard, but in December she sold a handwritten, leather-bound book of fairy
tales she described as drawing on the series' themes for nearly 2 million pounds
at auction. The money went to The Children's Voice, a charity Rowling co-founded
in 2005.