Friday, April 13, 2012

JK Rowling's Crime Novel

The book world is, apparently, abuzz with the news that JK Rowling's first adult book is going to be a crime novel called The Casual Vacancy. This is how the Guardian broke the news:
...
The Casual Vacancy, perhaps the most hotly anticipated book of the year, will be published on 27 September and is set in a small town called Pagford, described by her new publisher Little, Brown as an English idyll "with a cobbled market square and an ancient abbey". The story is set in motion by the unexpected demise of Barry Fairweather, a stalwart of the town's parish council who dies in his early forties. Pagford's chocolate-box façade hides a town riven with strife, and the struggle to replace Fairweather "becomes the catalyst for the biggest war the town has yet seen", with "teenagers at war with their parents, wives at war with their husbands, teachers at war with their pupils," the publisher said. 
As the election to find his replacement unleashes "passion, duplicity and unexpected revelations", the novel puts Pagford's rivalries under the microscope. There had been speculation that Rowling might be entering the genre of hard-boiled Edinburgh crime fiction after discovering that her editor, David Shelley, counts Dennis Lehane, Val McDermid, Carl Hiaasen and Mark Billingham among his authors.
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I don't know about you but this is not the novel I'm most anticipating this year (that would probably be the new Iain M Banks culture book) but I'm certainly not going to diss this work before it comes out. It does however seem very Barchester Towers to me and I have to say that Trollope's shoes are big shoes to fill. I'm also alarmed that Ms Rowling still thinks names like Fairweather are a good idea. I wonder if the villains will have names like Slimeweasel and Grindstone. Silly give the game away names are fine in childrens books but we expect better in the crime fiction world. I wonder too if the cliche of the English village with sinister goings on underneath wasn't already exploded by Agatha Christie circa 1925. In fact this trope had become so worn out by 1932 (!) that Stella Gibbons was able to parody it in her excellent novel Cold Comfort Farm. It's also the plot of pretty much every Barbara Pym book and the trope even got the Hollywood treatment in Hot Fuzz. Anyway we shall see. I will await her book and give it a fair review. I wont however be tugging my forelock just because Rowling is the most powerful author in the book business.

32 comments:

Peter Rozovsky said...

I hear that in the U.S. the good guy will be called Barry Goodguy and the bad guy Heinrich Arschloch.
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Detectives Beyond Borders
"Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
http://www.detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/

adrian mckinty said...

Peter

Yeah I have to say I'm not a fan of that kind of thing even in kids lit.

Peter Rozovsky said...

In myths, it's all right, though. I enjoy some of the epithets in the Tain, especially "The Lunatic."

On my way to the library to get Ciaran Carson's version now.

seana said...

Well, one thing this doesn't sound like is hardboiled Edinburgh style crime fiction. But I suspect her editor knows a goose that lays a golden egg when he happens upon one.

adrian mckinty said...

Peter

Lemme know what you think of it. I'm a big fan of CC.

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

There is no such thing as "hardboiled Edinburgh style fiction" though is there? It's a rich rather fey place isn't it? The worst thing that could happen to you in Edinburgh is accidentally getting your egg hardboiled. Ian Rankin, good bloke, but really he should be considered a fantasy novelist.

Peter Rozovsky said...

Just got back from the library with it. That version, plus Inherent Vice, will be my reading for a trip to Boston. Well, unless I decide I'm too cheerful and decide to read Dead Man Upright (Derek Raymond) instead.

seana said...

Okay, Glasgow style, then.

Peter Rozovsky said...

Ah, come on, Adrian. You're just dying to tell Seana that a Glasgow stabbing is more fun than an Edinburgh wedding.

seana said...

Peter, I've been to Edinburgh, but my only even fictional exposure to Glasgow was Taggart, which I did like a lot, even on the very dicey TV I had at the time.

Whenever anyone says dour, Taggart is pretty much who I think of.

Peter Rozovsky said...

I spent a couple of days in Glasgow and just a day in Edinburgh, so I can't say I experienced much of either city. I did leave Glasgow just after Glasgow Rangers had clinched the Scottish Premier League soccer title, so if I'd stayed on a few hours longer, I might have experienced a bit more local color.

seana said...

I expect that would be local colour, Peter. But you probably left at a good moment.

Fiona Harmsworth said...

I think J. K. Rowling may have lost the plot. Literally. Who could possibly imagine that there would be anything comic about megalomaniacs seizing control of community initiatives?

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

Taggarts a classic. It even survived the death of the lead. Thats a tough series.

adrian mckinty said...

Peter

Glasgow on an Old Firm day can be a fascinating sociological experience.

Peter Rozovsky said...

Adrian, sadly (or happily), this was not an Old Firm day. Rangers had beat a different team to clinch the league.

Peter Rozovsky said...

Though I did call a blog post from that trip "The Night of the Living Neds.

Brian Lindenmuth said...

One of my most hotly anticipated releases of the year just came out, Immobility by Brian Evenson.

There is no such thing as "hardboiled Edinburgh style fiction" though is there?

I submit Al Guthrie and Simon Logan.

Ben said...

It's interesting that she gives the genre a try, because if she hits a homerun she will cast a light on all of us.

Ben said...

It's interesting that she gives the genre a try, because if she hits a homerun she will cast a light on all of us.

Matt said...

There's your next Dagger award winner

Frankie said...

Do you give anyone from a public school a fair review? Ffffing silver spoons.. Ha ha! Maybe one shouldn't be allowed to be a crime writer unless they come from a high crime rate shithole, but then they ul be selling swag insted of honing the writting skills.

swooperman said...

Sounds a bit like Michael Ball releasing a rap record to me, but she deserves a fair go. lets just hope its a worthwhile release that would have made it whoever the author was.....I'm being naive aren't I?

Frankie said...

I just had a conversation with my dad on Skype and I mentioned JK's new crime novel. My opinion being whats the problem with that basically. My dad gave me an ear full saying, "the problem is that there is only a finite amount of space on bookshop shelves and there all full of Harry Potter and other safe bets to the detriment of other more interesting authors.

So anyway he is sending me a Harry Crews book.

adrian mckinty said...

Fiona

We'll give her a fair shake. The PR dept is not always to be trusted when describing a book.

adrian mckinty said...

Brian

Oh yeah Al Guthrie. Agree with that.

adrian mckinty said...

Ben

Yeah...I'm not entirely sure that will happen, but you never know.

adrian mckinty said...

Matt

Yeah thats more likely.

adrian mckinty said...

Frankie

I'm slightly prejudiced when they try to write working class characters and fail miserably. Its like Boris Johnson doing an Essex accent. But - especially if I'm reviewing the book for the paper - I will be entirely fair to Ms Rowling.

adrian mckinty said...

Swooper

No one will be able to get away from the book come November, mark my words.

seana said...

Thanks for the quick action on the Twitter feed. Although the bit where it says that JK Rowling is writing her first adult novel can be misconstrued, at least by American ears. It would be what's called growing her fan base,I guess.

Fred Shira said...

I haven't read the book yet, but I read the flyleaf, and I think you are right in that it appears to me to follow Barchester Towers, which is not necessarily a bad thing. The greatness in Trollop's write was his subtle humor. I hope Ms. Rowling doesn't take her story too seriously and allows us to grin once in a while