Publishers Lunch
Two weekend profiles of JK Rowling prepared
the ground for Thursday's release of THE CASUAL VACANCY, offering details on
the book as well as the process that has guarded both the author and the book's
contents.
Rowling told the
Guardian, which ran their piece on Saturday, she dreamed up the idea for
THE CASUAL VACANCY on a plane: "And I thought: local election! And I just
knew. I had that totally physical response you get to an idea that you know
will work. It's a rush of adrenaline, it's chemical. I had it with Harry Potter
and I had it with this. So that's how I know."
As to whether Rowling feels
"exposed" by the forthcoming publication, she told the
New Yorker, whose more than 10,000-word feature and extensive interview was
posted online Sunday, that she thought she'd "feel frightened at this
point,” she said. “Not just because it’s been five years, and anything I wrote
after Potter—anything—was going to receive a certain degree of attention that
is not entirely welcome, if I'm honest. It's not the place I'm happiest or most
comfortable, shall we say." She added: "'You're very lucky. You can
pay your bills, you don't have to publish it.' And that was a very freeing
thought, even though I knew bloody well, in my heart of hearts, that I was
going to publish it. I knew that a writer generally writes to be read, unless
you're Salinger." She was hoping for a "more run-of-the-mill
publishing experience" this time around, but the New Yorker says
"that hope only goes so far." (The only other print interview Rowling
has granted was for a forthcoming USA TODAY feature.)
Both stories offered more details about THE
CASUAL VACANCY, set in a fictional town of Pagford with the fate of a squalid
council estate, The Fields, that's up in the air and subject to nasty arguments
and doings after the death of a parish councillor. Written in multiple
perspectives, the book is "a story of class warfare set amid semi-rural
poverty, heroin addiction, and teen-age perplexity and sexuality." And
while it's being billed as a black comedy, Rowling sees THE CASUAL VACANCY more
as "a comic tragedy."
To the New Yorker, Rowling finds a common
through-line between the new book and the Potter series ("mortality,
morality, the two things I obsess about") while explaining to the Guardian
how much CASUAL VACANCY deals with class: "We're a phenomenally snobby
society," Rowling nods, "and it's such a rich seam. The middle class
is so funny, it's the class I know best, and it's the class where you find the
most pretension, so that's what makes the middle classes so funny."
In writer Ian Parker's assessment,
"within a few pages, it was clear that the novel had not been written for
children.... But reviewers looking for echoes of the Harry Potter series will
find them. THE CASUAL VACANCY describes young people coming of age in a place
divided by warring factions, and the deceased council member, Barry
Fairbrother—who dies in the first chapter but remains the story’s moral
center—had the same virtues, in his world, that Harry had in his: tolerance,
constancy, a willingness to act."
Rowling said she met with Little Brown UK
publisher David Shelley "without him knowing there was a book. So we just
had a conversation, and I could tell he was really on my wavelength. So then I
sort of vaguely mentioned what I might have, without saying it's virtually
finished. There was no auction. It was just a great way to find an
editor." Of the traditional alternative, she says: "The moment I said
I'd finished a book, I knew what would happen. There would be a bidding
war, and I would end up with someone who'd got the fattest wallet, who had
bought it because I'd written Harry Potter. That would have been why."
As is now customary with a new Rowling
book, the terms of the embargo are part of the story. The Guardian reporter
described being "required to sign more legal documents than would
typically be involved in buying a house before I am allowed to read THE CASUAL
VACANCY, under tight security in the London offices of Little Brown. Even the
publishers have been forbidden to read it, and they relinquish the manuscript
gingerly, reverently, as though handling a priceless Ming vase."
The New Yorker's Parker describes a 2003
situation in which Rowling's agent Neil Blair's handling of quote approval on
an interview had Bloomsbury publicity chief Minna Fry with "her head in
her hands," but says the magazine resisted a request to give Rowling quote
approval for their story. Parker did sign some form of non-disclosure agreement
in order to read the manuscript, and was initially "prohibited...from
taking notes."
The Independent whines
about being asked not to acknowledge the non-disclosure agreement they would
have had to sign in order to get a review copy ahead of time.
More stories about Rowling,(including the full whine from The Independent, & her new title appear below.
You know, most readers dont really care?
ReplyDeleteI stopped reading Rowling at book4 (I never actually finished it) and the very idea of her attempting ?crime
?reality fiction appeals like a cup of cold sick.