<p>The personal diaries of the late actor Alan Rickman, known for the <em>Harry Potter </em>film franchise,<u> </u><em>Die Hard</em> and<em> Love, Actually</em>, will be published as a book in late 2022.</p>.<p>According to <em>The Guardian</em>, the 27 volumes of handwritten diaries, spanning more than 25 years of Rickman's life and career, will be edited down into a single book.</p>.<p>The popular film and stage actor, best known for playing Professor Severus Snape in <em>Harry Potter</em> series, wrote about everything from his thoughts on acting to insights on friendships and politics in his journals.</p>.<p>Rickman, who died in 2016 at age 69 following a battle with cancer, began writing these diaries in the early 1990s with the intention of publishing them.</p>.<p>Publisher Canongate has acquired the rights to the book, reportedly titled <em>The Diaries of Alan Rickman</em>.</p>.<p>It will be edited by Alan Taylor, editor of the Scottish Review of Books, who also put together <em>The Country Diaries,</em> a collection of 'pastoral journalists' from Beatrix Potter, Dorothy Wordsworth, John Fowles and more.</p>.<p>Rickman's wife Rima Horton said she is looking forward to the book.</p>.<p>"I'm delighted that Canongate will be publishing Alan's diaries and couldn't have wished for a finer appointment of editor than Alan Taylor. The diaries reveal not just Alan Rickman the actor but the real Alan – his sense of humour, his sharp observation, his craftsmanship and his devotion to the arts," Horton said.</p>.<p>Taylor said Rickman's diaries were "anecdotal, indiscreet, witty, gossipy and utterly candid". </p>.<p>"They make compulsive reading and offer a peerless insight into the daily life of a remarkable actor, who was as beloved in the US as he surely was in the UK," he added.</p>.<p>Rickman, whose distinctive voice still rings in fans' ears, was also an avid theatre-goer who reviewed plays he attended and shared behind-the-scenes stories from the set of "Harry Potter", which he was a part of for a decade, between 2001 and 2011.</p>.<p>His career had already taken off with performances like Valmont in<em> Les Liaisons Dangereuses </em>at the Royal Shakespeare Company and in films as Hans Gruber, the villain opposite Bruce Willis in <em>Die Hard,</em> when he started writing journals.</p>.<p>His other negative roles include the sheriff of Nottingham in 1991's <em>Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves</em>, as well as a terrifying Rasputin in a 1995 HBO film.</p>.<p>His other notable roles include<em> Truly, Madly, Deepl</em>y, <em>Sense and Sensibility</em>, and <em>The Song of Lunch</em>.</p>.<p>Rickman made his directorial debut with <em>The Winter Guest </em>with his <em>Sense and Sensibility </em>star Emma Thompson. He also reunited with Kate Winslet, the other star of the movie, in 2015's <em>A Little Chaos.</em></p>.<p>He continued writing these diaries until his death.</p>
<p>The personal diaries of the late actor Alan Rickman, known for the <em>Harry Potter </em>film franchise,<u> </u><em>Die Hard</em> and<em> Love, Actually</em>, will be published as a book in late 2022.</p>.<p>According to <em>The Guardian</em>, the 27 volumes of handwritten diaries, spanning more than 25 years of Rickman's life and career, will be edited down into a single book.</p>.<p>The popular film and stage actor, best known for playing Professor Severus Snape in <em>Harry Potter</em> series, wrote about everything from his thoughts on acting to insights on friendships and politics in his journals.</p>.<p>Rickman, who died in 2016 at age 69 following a battle with cancer, began writing these diaries in the early 1990s with the intention of publishing them.</p>.<p>Publisher Canongate has acquired the rights to the book, reportedly titled <em>The Diaries of Alan Rickman</em>.</p>.<p>It will be edited by Alan Taylor, editor of the Scottish Review of Books, who also put together <em>The Country Diaries,</em> a collection of 'pastoral journalists' from Beatrix Potter, Dorothy Wordsworth, John Fowles and more.</p>.<p>Rickman's wife Rima Horton said she is looking forward to the book.</p>.<p>"I'm delighted that Canongate will be publishing Alan's diaries and couldn't have wished for a finer appointment of editor than Alan Taylor. The diaries reveal not just Alan Rickman the actor but the real Alan – his sense of humour, his sharp observation, his craftsmanship and his devotion to the arts," Horton said.</p>.<p>Taylor said Rickman's diaries were "anecdotal, indiscreet, witty, gossipy and utterly candid". </p>.<p>"They make compulsive reading and offer a peerless insight into the daily life of a remarkable actor, who was as beloved in the US as he surely was in the UK," he added.</p>.<p>Rickman, whose distinctive voice still rings in fans' ears, was also an avid theatre-goer who reviewed plays he attended and shared behind-the-scenes stories from the set of "Harry Potter", which he was a part of for a decade, between 2001 and 2011.</p>.<p>His career had already taken off with performances like Valmont in<em> Les Liaisons Dangereuses </em>at the Royal Shakespeare Company and in films as Hans Gruber, the villain opposite Bruce Willis in <em>Die Hard,</em> when he started writing journals.</p>.<p>His other negative roles include the sheriff of Nottingham in 1991's <em>Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves</em>, as well as a terrifying Rasputin in a 1995 HBO film.</p>.<p>His other notable roles include<em> Truly, Madly, Deepl</em>y, <em>Sense and Sensibility</em>, and <em>The Song of Lunch</em>.</p>.<p>Rickman made his directorial debut with <em>The Winter Guest </em>with his <em>Sense and Sensibility </em>star Emma Thompson. He also reunited with Kate Winslet, the other star of the movie, in 2015's <em>A Little Chaos.</em></p>.<p>He continued writing these diaries until his death.</p>