Orson Scott Card takes a few minutes to drill J.K. Rowling a new hole
Orson Scott Card Reviews Everything | J.K. Rowling, Lexicon and Oz
Rowling "feels like her words were stolen," said lawyer Dan Shallman.
Well, heck, I feel like the plot of my novel Ender's Game was stolen by J.K. Rowling.
A young kid growing up in an oppressive family situation suddenly learns that he is one of a special class of children with special abilities, who are to be educated in a remote training facility where student life is dominated by an intense game played by teams flying in midair, at which this kid turns out to be exceptionally talented and a natural leader. He trains other kids in unauthorized extra sessions, which enrages his enemies, who attack him with the intention of killing him; but he is protected by his loyal, brilliant friends and gains strength from the love of some of his family members. He is given special guidance by an older man of legendary accomplishments who previously kept the enemy at bay. He goes on to become the crucial figure in a struggle against an unseen enemy who threatens the whole world.
This paragraph lists only the most prominent similarities between Ender's Game and the Harry Potter series. My book was published in England many years before Rowling began writing about Harry Potter. Rowling was known to be reading widely in speculative fiction during the era after the publication of my book.
I can get on the stand and cry, too, Ms. Rowling, and talk about feeling "personally violated."
The difference between us is that I actually make enough money from Ender's Game to be content, without having to try to punish other people whose creativity might have been inspired by something I wrote.
Mine is not the only work that one can charge Rowling "borrowed" from. Check out this piece from a fan site, pointing out links between Harry Potter and other previous works: http://www.geocities.com/versetrue/rowling.htm. And don't forget the lawsuit by Nancy K. Stouffer, the author of a book entitled The Legend of Rah and the Muggles, whose hero was named "Larry Potter."...
It's true that we writers borrow words from each other ? but we're supposed to admit it and not pretend we're original when we're not. I took the word ansible from Ursula K. LeGuin, and have always said so. Rowling, however, denies everything.
Comments
OK, props to Card for pointing out the obvious similarities between Enders Game and much of the HP stuff, but his reference to Nancy Stouffer makes me sad as it was pretty much proven in court that she added the word "muggles" to her book after HP was published, and could only do so because it had been self-published in the first place and sold exactly zero copies.
I would have brought up the Books of Magic myself...a Neil Gaiman line about a bespectacled English youth who finds out he has the potential to be one of the greatest magic users in the world. Certainly much darker, and more daring, then anything Rowling did in HP, but that line was published before HP and did sell...
Posted by: kilian | May 2, 2008 01:03 AM
Interesting, if tangential, factoids pertaining to this case:
1) The book is a dead-tree reformatting of the Harry Potter Lexicon website.
2) According to Wikipedia, Rowling was a huge fan of the site: "This is such a great site that I have been known to sneak into an internet café while out writing and check a fact rather than go into a bookshop and buy a copy of Harry Potter (which is embarrassing). A website for the dangerously obsessive; my natural home." ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven_Vander_Ark )
3) The author, Steven Vander Ark, is a middle-school librarian from Michigan (yeah!)
4) Rowling made him cry in court in other day: http://www.mlive.com/business/index.ssf/2008/04/former_byron_center_libraian_t.html (booo!)
Posted by: dave-o | May 2, 2008 01:53 PM
Well, she did make herself cry also...but really, after reading too much about the whole thing, and way too much of the court transcripts I agree with Card's assertion that, basically, it seems like she doesn't want him to do publish his book because she wants to publish one...which strikes me as childish to no end.
Posted by: kilian | May 2, 2008 03:58 PM