Talk:Harry Potter

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How do we know it was Ten who first read DH? The Doctor has been up and down Earth's history for most of his life, and every one of his lives. - Tawaki 21:10, 11 August 2008 (UTC)

William Russell's son

I know what the IMDb says, but are we certain that Alfie Enoch is William Russell's son and not his grandson? I know it's not impossible for someone in his 60s or older to have a kid (just ask Charlie Chaplin and James Doohan), but we should be certain. 23skidoo 04:42, September 16, 2009 (UTC)

Article split

Should this article not be split into two parts, using (sort of) the same logic that's recently been applied to Star Trek and Star Trek (franchise)? It's slightly different, though, in that the division is generally much clearer. In universe, Harry Potter refers to the book series only. Out-of-universe, Harry Potter's relevance is all about the movie series (with the exception of the fact that JK was asked to write a DW episode, but that bit is more directly related to J.K. Rowling article than a Harry Potter one.) CzechOut | 20:55, February 11, 2010 (UTC)

Actors appearing in...

It would be nice if the actors' names were followed by both their character in the HP films and their character in DW. I know right now I can follow each name linked within this wiki but I think it belongs directly on this page. Somebody who could do a column separation so that it reads easily would be helpfull. --Stillnotginger 07:22, February 27, 2010 (UTC)

Eleven books

Maybe the extra books could refer to "Quidditch Throughout The Ages", "Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them", "The Tales of Beetle The Bard", and another companion piece?98.220.223.197 21:02, June 2, 2010 (UTC)

Or, maybe she only wrote more books in the Whoniverse. Anyway, I think she is writing a new one so it may come true. User:Solar Dragon/Signature 21:28, June 2, 2010 (UTC)
If the reason for believing that in the Whoniverse there are eleven books in the Harry Potter series is the line: "replacing it next to its ten other sequels" In EDA: The Gallifrey Chronicles, as quoted in the article here, then it would indicate that there are actually TWELVE Harry Potter novels: an original novel, the one that is replaced and the ten other sequels. Would someone familiar with EDA: The Gallifrey Chronicles be kind enough to confirm one way or the other? Boblipton 00:02, July 16, 2011 (UTC)