Rowling fled home over 'sitting duck' fears
Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling had to flee her home after press reports made her a "sitting duck" for stalkers.
The writer bought a property in Scotland with the advance royalties from her first Potter novel in the late 1990s, but after the book propelled her to fame, a photograph of the property was published in a newspaper.
Rowling claims her full address could be seen in the shot - and she
was forced to moved out because she feared being tracked down by
"anyone who wanted to find me".
The Brit appeared at the Leveson Inquiry into press standards in
London on Thursday (24Nov11) and told how she has battled to keep
her family life private for more than 14 years.
She told the hearing, "That was the first house I had ever owned,
and I bought that with the advances that I had received for the
first Harry Potter book. We moved into that house in 1997 and we
left that house in 1999. So during those two years it had really
become untenable to remain in that house.
"Photographs had been published that showed not only the number of
the house but also the name of the street. So I really was a
sitting duck for anyone who wanted to find me."
Rowling also alleged a journalist once tried to contact her by
slipping a letter into her five-year-old daughter's school bag.
She adds, "I can only say I felt such a sense of invasion... how
angry I felt that my five-year-old daughter's school was no longer
a place of complete security from journalists... It's difficult to
explain - to people who haven't experienced it - what it feels
like. The twist in the stomach - what do they want? It feels
threatening to have people watching you."
Rowling is the latest in a string of celebrities to give evidence
at the hearing, which was set up after the News of the World
phone-hacking scandal exploded earlier this year (11).