Hello Marauders, or should I say Dia dhuit , which is hello in Gaelic! Sadly I wish I knew more words from P&P’s great stint across the pond, however I was much to busy sipping espresso, drinking pints, and basking in Irish sunlight with a good book. Sounds idyllic right? Not going to lie, it basically was. However now we are back to the real world and that includes of course book reviews!! This is my first review in over a year so please bear with me. In fact you might just want to ignore this one all together, and wait for next weeks as I imagine it will be a huge improvement. Alas, here we go….
“Things denied, things untold, things hidden and disguised.”
The Casual Vacancy
By J. K Rowling
To quote a fellow book reviewer,” I think J K Rowling is a brilliant writer and I would have bought this book if it were $117.99 and written in pencil on toilet paper”. Couldn’t have said it better myself, which is proven by the fact that during the day of the long anticipated release of J.K Rowling’s ‘First Adult Fiction Novel’ I was literally standing at a Dublin airport circa 5 a.m. hounding the airport book store employees to just ‘PUT THE FRACKING BOOKS OUT ALREADY’. Needless to say not my finest hour. And sadly for my all time literary hero, Rowling, not hers either.
‘The Casual Vacancy’ takes its title name from a term in politics, applied when someone on a council seat is suddenly found unable to retain their position. For example a sudden aneurism in the middle of a parking lot, which is exactly how Barry Fairweather, Padgeforth council man kicks off the namesake of the novel. What follows is a measured, some-what convoluted, look into the lives of the residents of what appears on the surface to be a small tranquil English town. Of course with any good story, the appearances of the town are not what they seem, as the residents begin to show their true colors and intentions fuelled by their own immorality and dissolution. Rowling offers up a cornucopia of characters for us to hate, to judge, and to at times root for, making the slow progression of the townsfolk the central theme to the story. The death of quite possibly the only true protagonist of the story, is just a McGuffin to keep the reader moving along with the story, hoping that the tragedy of one man will hope to lead to the moral triumph of another. It was an interesting literary device to use on Rowlings part, but I couldn’t help but feel at the end of the day, it fell a bit flat.
We have seen it countless times, a successful actor, entrepreneur, comedian, whathave you who finds tremendous success in one genre, then almost rebels against that success to prove that they are not a one trick pony. For a good example listen to Bob Saget’s standup comedy routine. Writers are not without exception. No one will blame Rowling for wanting to move away from the ‘Young Adult’ genre, however what I cannot forgive on this occasion is the lack of artistic merit that went along with her debut. It seemed to me that while Rowling was clearly targeting a more adult audience, with drug references, abuse topics, and even rape, she seemed to forget that adult themes does not an adult book make. While the topics were more mature, the writing style was not, and there were times when I was literally forcing myself to continue on with the story. There is good stuff here, but the gilmers are few and far between.
“She had a way of moving that moved him as much as music, which was what moved him most of all. Surely the spirit animating that pearless body must be unusual too? Why would nature make a vessel like that, if not to contain something still more valuable?”