In an interview with The Guardian’s Decca Aitkenhead last weekend, JK Rowling said: “I
just needed to write this book. I like it a lot, I’m proud of it, and that
counts for me.”
Well, I think she’s right to be proud of The Casual Vacancy, and I said as much
when I reviewed it for the Daily Express
this week. Even though Rowling’s first book for adults features “teenage sex,
drug addiction, swearing and scenes that would make Harry Potter blush,” I
called it “a highly readable morality tale for our times.”
The book’s been out for two days now and everyone I
know is desperate to read it. My husband’s visiting my daughter in Paris this
weekend and the first thing she asked him to bring from the UK was a prized copy
of The Casual Vacancy. “I’m going to
stay in all weekend and read it,” she said happily. “I can’t wait.” Her excitement took me back to the old days, when we used to drive to the old Borders shop in
Oxford and queue at midnight for each newly published Harry Potter story.
I’ve been stunned by the vitriol that JK Rowling has attracted
in some quarters this week. The New York
Times’s Michiko Kakutani judged her book to be “willfully banal” and
“depressingly clichéd” and said it read like “an odd mash-up of a dark soap
opera like Peyton Place.” And writing in the Daily Mail, Jan Moir acidly declared that it was “more than 500 pages of
relentless socialist manifesto masquerading as literature crammed down your
throat.”
I completely disagree with both of them. The Casual Vacancy isn’t perfect by any
means, but it’s a gripping story. I read it in one go, barely glancing up to
make a cup of tea or switch the lights on as dusk fell. Yes, the themes are
dark, most of the characters are unlikeable and Rowling’s style is workmanlike
rather than literary, but she is a brilliant storyteller. There was no way in a
million years that I could have stopped reading this book. In my newspaper
review I gave it four out of five stars and I stand by every word.
Can't say I feel drawn to read it but have been amused by all the accusations of middle-class apostasy. How dare she!
ReplyDeleteShe's certainly set the cat among the pigeons, I agree Mary.
DeleteI am really looking forward to reading it - at the end of the day you can write beautiful prose until the cows come home but if the story doesn't work, prose means nothing - and JK Rowling is a great story teller!
ReplyDeleteMy thoughts exactly, Older Mum. At the end of the day The Casual Vacancy isn't perfect but it's a gripping story. Let me know what you think!
DeleteI'd rather thought I wouldn't bother (I've never really understood why HP was considered so wonderful) but now I'm more intrigued by it from having heard mixed reviews. Probably going to wait till the library have a copy and the reservation list has gone down a bit, so it could be a while...
ReplyDeleteHi Mary. I think you're right. It might be a while before the reservation list has gone down. But we often think alike on books so I'd love to know your thoughts on TCV.
DeleteI think the critics set out to dislike this book before it had even been released. I will read it though thanks to your review,I am now tempted! :)
ReplyDeleteThank you for commenting, Emma. And please will you let me know what you reckon once you've read the book?
DeleteThere does seem to be a lot of 'tall poppies' syndrome out there. Read your review, Emma - it was one of the few balanced ones! Well done.
ReplyDeleteVery kind of you, Julia, and much appreciated. I think you've hit the nail on the head with your "tall poppies" comment.
DeleteI for one like to make up my own mind when I read something and so, try not to read reviews until I have read the book myself! I think whatever J K Rowling did next, she was always going to be judged harshly by a number of people. The way of the British public seems to be to bring people back down when they reach the top! I like your review Emma. I think its very fair.
ReplyDeleteThanks very much, Victoria. Your comments mean a lot. I tried to review the book completely objectively and can't believe how nasty some people have been!
DeleteI am half-way through and I am really enjoying it. She had so much to live up to and I think it is very readable, great characters and a keen observation of small-town prejudice. I look for the positive; it is very easy to condemn....
ReplyDeleteExactly what I thought, Sarah. Let me know what you think when you've finished the whole novel. I'd love to hear.
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