JK Rowling hits back at 'skinny model' critics
Harry Potter creator JK Rowling has hit back at critics who accused her of hypocrisy for attacking skinny models.
Last month the best-selling author revealed that she feared her two daughters would grow up to be âempty-headed, self-obsessed, emaciated clonesâ in a world where waif-life women make the covers of fashion magazines.
In response, one journalist pointed out that in her books, Dudley Dursley, a bully who makes Harryâs life a misery, is fat, while her hero is âslim and attractiveâ.
Writing on her website, Rowling responded by saying that the people in the Harry Potter books who are âon the plumper sideâ include âseveral of my most important, admirable and loveable charactersâ.
She approvingly included a link to a fan website â www.mugglenet.com â that lists seven characters who are âfat and goodâ, three who are âfat and badâ and claims there are none who are âfat and evilâ.
In her original statement, also posted on her Internet site, www.jkrowling.com, Edinburgh-based Rowling wrote: âIs âfatâ really the worst thing a human being can be? Is âfatâ worse than âvindictiveâ, âjealousâ, âshallowâ, âvainâ, âboringâ or âcruelâ?
âNot to me; but then, you might retort, what do I know about the pressure to be skinny? Iâm not in the business of being judged on my looks, what with being a writer and earning my living by using my brain.â
Writing in the Mail on Sunday in response, Simon Walters said Dudley was âdisgustingly fatâ and argued he was ânot the only fat boy who is a figure of funâ in the Harry Potter books.
He added: âHarry often said Dudley looked like a pig in a wig. For every schoolboy with black hair and glasses who has been called Harry Potter in the playground, there is another fat boy who has been called Dudley, fat, stupid, nasty Dudley.
âMaybe it is time for Rowling to create a new hero, male or even better female, who is fat.â
In the note posted on her website today under the ârubbish binâ section where she debunks myths about her and her books, Rowling insisted that ââoverweightâ in no way equates to âbadâ in my fictional world.â
In a separate website posting, she also reveals that she has solved the problem of a lack of paper to write the seventh and last book in her wizarding saga.
Last month, Rowling complained on her website that progress with the book was going well but she was finding it hard to find somewhere to buy any paper.
But fans now appear to have come to her rescue.
She wrote on the site: âBe careful what you wish for, it might come true. Since complaining that I had difficulty finding anything to write on after running out of paper while working in town, I have been deluged with paper.
âSome of you sent single sheets, others entire pads, one enterprising paper merchants sent a large stack of notebooks embossed boldly with J K ROWLING, which I might not use in public, but which are very lovely all the same.
âOthers took a different approach, telling me exactly where you can buy writing paper in Edinburgh â some even enclosed maps. Anyway, Iâve now got enough paper to write several book sevens, so no excuse there.â