Showing posts with label The Casual Vacancy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Casual Vacancy. Show all posts

Monday, November 5, 2012

Review | The Casual Vacancy

'Eastenders on Steroids' -That's my three word review of Rowling's The Casual Vacancy.  Eastenders - for those are fortunate enough not to have ever seen (Don't you lead a charmed life?)  is a long running soap on the BBC set in the East of London. There are clan wars, sordid affairs, pregnant teenagers and the odd attempt to acknowledge minority citizens. J K Rowling's book transposes that plot line onto a small british village, Pagford, that is thrown into disarray by the sudden death of a local councilman- Barry Fairbrother. The empty seat becomes the bone of contention as townsmen and women from different walks of life and differing personal agendas put their names forward to contest the seat, none of them deserving candidates in my opinion, which sets into motion a series of events that culminate, as always, in skeletons walking free of their closets, disillusioned suicidal teenagers and death. Through the dialogue and the prejudices, J K Rowling tries to weave in her own agenda, which is to lament the viciousness of gossip, breakdown of family values and the dark side of human nature. All of which is surprisingly entertaining, just like an episode of Eastenders.

Moving on from the plotline and into the writing, the first page reads like one from a Harry Potter novel. She takes on the usual third person omniscient view point- " Barry Fairbrother did not want to go out to dinner. [...]",  and setting the scene that will be the catalyst for the storyline moving forward. Rowling's tone is fairly acerbic through the entire book, especially when it comes to sex, which is abundant throughout the novel, as if overcompensating for the fact that she is a children's author. "The leathery skin of her upper cleavage radiated little cracks that no long vanished with decompressed." Toto, we're not in Hogwarts anymore! Especially since none of the characters, and I kid you not, none, not even the children are likable. Okay make the toddler. But that's it. So there's no Molly Wobbles or Dobby here to endear you to the book.

Rowling doesn't pull any punches whether it is commenting on the effects of racial bullying of a sikh teenage girl with too much facial hair or the debilitating effects of subliminal class warfare so deeply entrenched in the fabric of the village society, that it echoes in every dialogue. At the heart of the story is the battle between the success of rehabilitation and upward mobility. For instance,  can we, today,  take someone from a slum in mumbai, enroll him in Cathedral and watch him grow up to become a CEO of a major bank in twenty years. Will you allow your child to go to school with that kid from the slums? Will that child infect others with his grim view world or will he change? These are some of the topics Rowling addresses but in a terribly superficial manner, exactly like an Eastenders episode.

Rowling is a great storyteller and she really does reel you in with her seedy plot line but once you are done with it you're left feeling exactly the way you feel after you've bitched someone out- dirty and guilt ridden but quite ready to jump right in into the next bitching session.


Monday, October 1, 2012

RecommendedReads | Rare interview with J K Rowling


As The Casual Vacancy flies off the shelves -- mostly because of pre-orders like mine which get bought solely on the fact that it is J K Rowling -- the web is awash with criticism. She's not on the bestseller list yet, but it only came out Friday. Some of the reviews, like the New Yorker, are scathing while the Guardian's is more restrained, preferring to say,
"Rowling relies on stock situations and verbal clichés; if you're irritated by important episodes being telegraphed with phrases such as 'But then came the hour that changed everything,' then this is probably not the novel for you. But equally, it offers something that more stylish, highbrow fiction often doesn't or won't: a chance to lose yourself in a dense, richly-peopled world."
The cafe is sharing this read with you not for the review -- any respectable potter fan is going to buy this book -- but for the extremely rare and insightful interview that has been embedded here where J K Rowling doesn't whine, understands her life is perfect, hasn't read Fifty Shades of Grey and says that the worst they can say is that it's shockingly bad.

Watch the video on The Guardian here

Buy The Casual Vacancy from Flipkart.com
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Wednesday, April 18, 2012

RecommendedReads | Rowling Returns, the Swedes Invade and a Book Club is Revived


The Return of Rowling
Are you a fan of Rowling the writer, Rowling the storyteller or THE JK Rowling who created the most fantastically imaginative tale of contemporary times? You'll be happy to know that the title and the synopses of the author's next novel, aimed at adults this time, has been revealed. Slated for release on September 27, the book is called The Casual Vacancy and traces the story of a little non-magic town called Pagford that's reduced to chaos when a member of its parish council dies quite suddenly. This new release is exciting because we didn't think she'd ever get a move on it. But at the same time, The Caterpillars are bit skeptical about Rowling writing a novel only for adults. We read and loved Harry Potter from the time we were in our late-teens and throw eggs at people who dismiss it as a children's novel even now. To have this master storyteller suddenly limit her talent to adults isn't fair to her audience, who though statistically younger, have read and still read the series as part of their timeless favourites.

The Swedish Invasion
Where once was a famine, now is a feast...” says this LATimesMagazine article about Nordic crime fiction that has been on readers' radars since Stieg Larsson's Millennium trilogy. If you're a fan of the genre and haven't known what to buy and try, the article--written by John-Henri Holmberg, a Swedish critic and co-writer of The Enigma of Stieg Larsson & the Secrets Behind the Most Compelling Thrillers of Our Time—lists some titles you absolutely must try. The Caterpillars are quite keen on Håkan Nesser's Mind's Eye that's centered around what seems to be an open-and-shut case until the chief suspect is found dead, and Unwanted by Kristina Ohlsson which is about a an abducted child found dead with the word 'Unwated' scribbled on her forehead.

Pulitzer 2012 Withheld?
It's almost like Christmas has been canceled for three American fiction authors published in 2011! "The main reason [for the fiction decision] is that no one of the three entries received a majority and thus, after lengthy consideration, no prize was awarded," says Sig Gissler, administrator of the Pulitzers to the Associated Press.


On a Happy Note, We're Starting a Book Club
… or rather, reviving The Caterpillar Club and opening it up to readers across Mumbai (This is where we're based so readers from other parts of the world can always write in to us for ideas, information and  support because we luff you so!)
Our first meeting is scheduled for May and though we're still zooming in on the format, location and other nitty-gritties--including the first read of the year--we'd love to invite you to be part of it! So if you're Mumbai based, love books and have no one to read them with, let alone share your opinions with, send us an email at info.caterpillarcafe@gmail.com and we'll keep send you all the things you need to know.

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