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Pot parody may attract voters
By Hempology | October 8, 2007
North Shore News, BC
03 Oct 2007
Jane Seyd
WV RIDING COULD GO TO POT
Federal Ndp Candidate Thinks Marijuana Should Be Legal
The federal NDP candidate for West Vancouver says he’s not worried that a pot-laced parody of Harry Potter he wrote will cost him votes – — on the contrary, Dana Larsen says he’s hoping his marijuana-focused novel will help educate the public and entertain people who agree with him that pot should be legal.
“I think the majority of people in B.C. support ending the war on drugs,” said Larsen. “If anything, it might attract people.”
Larsen, 36, was nominated by acclamation earlier this year as the federal NDP candidate in the West Vancouver-Sunshine Coast-Sea-to-Sky riding. Larsen, who lives on the Sunshine Coast, joined the party in 2003 after previously being active in the Marijuana Party. A marijuana activist, Larsen was also editor of Cannabis Culture magazine for many years.
Most recently, however, Larsen has turned his literary efforts to a full-length parody of author J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter books — a version that’s liberally cloaked in tell-tale blue smoke that has nothing to do with conventional wizardry.
Hairy Pothead and the Marijuana Stone features a character who think he is an ordinary boy — until he is rescued by a bike, gets a glass bong, lives in Cannabis Castle and attends Hempwards School of Herbcraft and Weedery. And that’s just the beginning.
An initial print run of 30,000 copies are being printed in magazine format by Cannabis Culture magazine and will be for sale this month in the magazine section of many bookstores.
“I’m hoping it’s popular enough that we have to make some reprints,” said Larsen.
The author, who counts himself has an avid Harry Potter fan, said he’s not concerned about any legal troubles stemming from the parody. Many other people have written take-offs on the books and the characters in Rowling’s novels and posted them online, said Larsen.
“I don’t think anybody will pick up my book and think it’s the next instalment of Harry Potter.”
Larsen, whose day job is working at the Vancouver Seed Bank — which sells marijuana seeds through the mail — said he didn’t check with anyone from the NDP before going public with Hairy Pothead but he doesn’t think the book will cost him politically.
“I didn’t send Jack Layton an e-mail,” he said. “. . . they knew I was a marijuana activist when they took me on as a candidate.”
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