Location from Harry Potter by J.K. Rowling
A strange, rook-shaped tower near Ottery St Catchpole where Xenophilius Lovegood publishes The Quibbler and where Harry first learned the legend of the Deathly Hallows.
The Lovegood house is Luna in architectural form — strange, defiant, and hiding more substance than it first appears. Xenophilius lives here surrounded by the research and conspiracy theories he publishes in The Quibbler, most of which are nonsense, except for the ones that aren't. It was here, over Gurdyroot tea, that he told Harry, Ron, and Hermione the Tale of the Three Brothers and explained the Deathly Hallows — a legend Hermione dismissed as a fairy tale until it turned out to be history. The visit ended badly: Xenophilius, desperate to get Luna back from Death Eater captors, tried to turn them in. The house was partially destroyed in the escape. The Hallows symbol Xenophilius wore around his neck turned out to be one of the most important clues in the entire war.
A black cylindrical tower resembling a giant chess rook, standing alone in a garden of odd, unidentifiable plants. Inside, a spiral staircase connects cluttered rooms filled with printing press equipment, strange collections, and Xenophilius's eccentric decor. A bust of Rowena Ravenclaw wears a replica of her diadem. The Quibbler's printing press dominates the ground floor. Everything is slightly off-kilter.
Also known as: the Lovegood house, Lovegood House, Xenophilius's tower