J.K. Rowling starts 'Harry Potter At Home' for housebound families during COVID-19 pandemic

A volunteer stamps copies of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone at The Crafty Social during preparations for Chattanooga Moms for Social Justice's Harry Potter-themed Magic of Literacy event on Thursday, Oct. 4, 2018, in Chattanooga, Tenn. The group is announcing an initiative dubbed the Classroom Library Project which will fundraise to donate full libraries to Hamilton County teachers.
A volunteer stamps copies of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone at The Crafty Social during preparations for Chattanooga Moms for Social Justice's Harry Potter-themed Magic of Literacy event on Thursday, Oct. 4, 2018, in Chattanooga, Tenn. The group is announcing an initiative dubbed the Classroom Library Project which will fundraise to donate full libraries to Hamilton County teachers.

NEW YORK (AP) - J.K. Rowling is hoping a dash of Harry Potter will help families confined to their homes during the coronavirus pandemic.

The author has launched an online initiative, www.harrypotterathome.com, which features quizzes, games and other activities. For the month of April, Rowling also has partnered with the audio publisher-distributor Audible and the library e-book supplier OverDrive for free audio and digital editions of the first Potter book, "Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone." (The U.S. edition is called "Harry Potter's and the Sorcerer's Stone").

Rowling's British and American print publishers, Bloomsbury and Scholastic, will contribute materials to the Potter web site and to their own web sites.

"The teachers, parents and carers working to keep children's lives as normal and happy as possible while we're all on lockdown deserve a bit of magic," Rowling said in a statement Wednesday. "I hope these initiatives will give children and even adults a happy distraction during their enforced stay-at-home time."

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