Skip to main content

harry potter - How many books did Gilderoy Lockhart write?


We know Gilderoy Lockhart wrote the multi-volume "Magical Me." But there are other books as well that he wrote, including one about pests.


What is the total number of books that Gilderoy Lockhart wrote, counting each book of Magical Me as a unique title?



Answer



There appear to be nine books; however, both Fred Weasley and Lockhart himself describe the seven books on the Hogwarts list as the complete set


In the beginning of Chamber of Secrets Harry's booklist contains the following titles by Gilderoy Lockheart:



  1. Break with a Banshee

  2. Gadding with Ghouls


  3. Holidays with Hags

  4. Travels with Trolls

  5. Voyages with Vampires

  6. Wanderings with Werewolves

  7. Year with the Yeti


Fred promptly says (my emphasis):



"You've been told to get all Lockhart's books, too!"




This would imply that the complete set of Lockhart's books is seven in number.


When they are degnoming the garden Mrs. Weasley reads from Gilderoy Lockhart's Guide to Household Pests so that brings us up to eight books altogether.


When they meet Lockhart in Flourish and Blotts he is signing copies of Magical Me, which would bring us up to nine books.


Lockhart gives Harry a complete set of his books:



The crowd cheered and clapped and Harry found himself being presented with the entire works of Gilderoy Lockhart.



Harry promptly gives these books to Ginny:



"You have these." Harry mumbled to her, tipping the books into the cauldron. "I'll buy my own –"




This implies that there wouldn't be too many other books besides for the seven that were required for school, because otherwise there would be no need to give them to Ginny, nor to buy others for himself.


Lockhart himself, in the first Defense Against the Dark arts class appears to describe the books on the Hogwarts list as the complete set:



"I see you've all bought a complete set of my books – well done."



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

futurama - How much time is lost in 'Time Keeps on Slippin''

In time Keeps on Slippin' , Farnsworth creates a basketball team which he matures by abusing Chronitons. This leads to time skipping forward by random, but ever increasing amounts. How much time was skipped in this way? Answer Unfortunately, I don't think a good estimate can be made for this, for two reasons: Many of the time skips move forward by an indeterminate amount of time. At one point, the Professor mentions localized regions of space skipping forward much more than others. We then see two young boys on the street below complaining about having to pay social security, only to suddenly become senior citizens and start complaining about wanting their money. Thus, each individual could have experienced a different amount of time skippage.

aliens - Interstellar Zoo story

I vaguely remember this story from my childhood: it was about an interstellar zoo that came to Earth with lots of bizarre and unusual species, and humans would file through and gape at all the crazy looking creatures from other planets. The twist came at the end when the perspective shifted to the other side of the bars and we discovered that the "creatures" were traveling through space on a kind of safari. They thought they were the visitors and we were the animals. Neither side knew that the other side thought they were the zoo creatures. Answer Got it. Zoo, by Edward D. Hoch. Published in 1958. Link to Publication History Link to PDF

Which Doctor Who works are canon?

I have been watching a Doctor Who documentary and they mentioned that Paul McGann did audio stories so he wasn't just a one-hit Doctor (and that there are novels featuring his Doctor as well). My question is: is Doctor Who canon just the show, or is it like Star Wars where some books and audios are canon and some are not? The documentary also shows that before 2005 they did audio stories where the Doctor is female and obviously that cannot be — not the female part, but the show doesn't count any female Doctors in episodes like The Day of the Doctor . Answer Nothing, and also everything The definitive piece of writing on Doctor Who canon is this blog post by writer Paul Cornell . I'm essentially going to be summarizing his post here, much less eloquently, but one section I want to quote directly is this: Nobody at the BBC has ever uttered a pronouncement about what is and isn't canonical. (As I'm sure they'd put it, being such enthusiasts for good grammar.) Be...

harry potter - Did Dolores Umbridge Have Any Association with Voldemort (or Death Eaters) before His Return?

I noticed that Dolores Umbridge was born during the first Wizarding War, so it's very likely she wasn't a Death Eater then (but she is pretty evil -- who knows?). After that Voldemort was not around in a way that could affect many people, and most wouldn't know he was planning to rise again. During that time, and up through Voldemort's return (in Goblet of Fire ), did Umbridge have any connection with the Death Eaters or with Voldemort? Was she doing what she did on her own, or was it because of an association with Voldemort or his allies? Answer Dolores Umbridge was definitely not a good person. However, as Sirius points out, "the world isn't split into good people and Death Eaters". Remember that he also says that he doesn't believe Umbridge to be a Death Eater, but that she's evil enough (or something like that). I think there are two strong reasons to believe that: Umbridge was proud to do everything according to the law, except when she trie...