Subject: Timeslides
Author:
Posted on: 2019-07-16 18:04:00 UTC

In the mid-80s, J. K. Rowling started publishing her Harry Potter series with her first book, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone. The series sold reasonably well, though it didn't really take off in the mainstream. Sales were steady enough that publishers kept coming back for the rest of the story though. These days, Harry Potter is a cult fantasy classic.

Meanwhile, in the late 90s, Diane Duane, who up to that point had been a lightly successful author, got a big break with the first book of her new Young Wizards series, So You Want to Be a Wizard. The book was wildly popular and practically flew off the shelves. The sequels continued the trend, and the series rapidly became a cultural phenomenon.

Inevitably, a movie series was produced. Due to Duane having significant input on the scripts, the films were a good adaptation of the books while also being good movies in their own right. (This also ensured that Kit stayed Latino, much to the relief of the fandom.) Sker'ret had the animators simultaneously looking forward to the interesting project and groaning about how much work all this guy was going to be.

New York City, despite only being a secondary location, saw a spike of Young Wizards-related tourist revenue, much to the annoyance of New Jersey (who got fewer tourists than they'd like) and commuters who want those damm kids to stop standing in the middle of everything to take selfies while holding broken car antennas. There are now signs pointing to the worldgate platform at the relevant subway stops.

(CrossingsCon remains, of course, a massive annual event, with smaller cons all around the globe)

It should be noted that the books weren't without controversy, mainly due to their handling of religious themes and mixing magic in with all this. The canonical gay and ace characters didn't help reception among the fundamentalist crowd either.

There was also, however, an uproar from the autistic community on the release of A Wizard Alone/. Once the issues came to light, Diane Duane, much to the annoyance of her publisher, had printing stopped and copies pulled where possible (partly out of her pocket) so she could fix the problems. Fans generally like version 2, which took a few months to get into shape, better.

The spinoff Feline Wizards series, released somewhat recently, was well-received among the fans that it's getting a movie adaptation too.

The free to play cash grab mobile game is, sadly, still a thing, much to everyone's annoyance. Can't have everything in the AU dream.

(Credit to Gnanz for the book re-release idea)

- Tomash

Reply Return to messages