In The Silkworm, J.K. Rowling’s (writing as Robert Galbraith) follow up to
The Cuckoo’s Calling, prickly detective Cormoran Strike is called into
investigate the disappearance of an author who was rumored to have written a
scathing novel that uses real publishing world folks as characters and
revealing secrets most would not like the general public to read about.
Leonora Quine, the dowdy wife of the novelist Owen Quine,
hires Strike find Quine. And at first, no one suspects anything is amiss, as
the author has vanished for days before. But Leonora, taking care of her developmentally
handicapped child Orlando, realizes that nearly 2 weeks have passed since her
husband vanished, but instead of filing a missing persons report, she hires
Strike.
But this is a mystery novel and it’s no surprise to the
reader when Quine is discovered dead –by Strike- who has also been gruesomely
slaughtered in the exact way a character is killed in the mysterious novel the
author was penning, Bombyx Mori.
Now Strike (and his Girl Friday, Robin) must navigate the
apparent under belly of the publishing industry, and Rowling seems to take great
pleasure in taking pot shots at it. The book comes across as a mystery, of course,
and her prose style is brutal and modern as most crime thrillers have become,
but it can be seen as a satire of the celebrity tell-all and of the genre
itself.
To me, had the world not discovered that Galbraith was
Rowling, this second book might’ve been seen as one authors attempt at showing
how difficult it can be to get anything published (although two characters echo
one problem that exist today in the book publishing industry –a lot of authors
releasing books, but not a lot of people reading them), especially in this time
where ebooks and self-publishing are becoming more common than ever before.
Still, as modern a thriller as this is, The Silkworm also
comes off as a classic whodunit from the 1950s, which would appeal to more
traditional readers of the genre, as we get a gaggle of odd and eccentric
characters who all have reason to want Quine dead. Strike even has a friend in
the police department who is willing to pass on information (the officer is in
debt to Strike for saving him in the Afghanistan war). And yet Robin, his once
temporary secretary, is given a bit more to do here, even while she still comes
off as little underdeveloped. But while they seem “meant” for each other, their
relationship seems to be built on mutual appreciation for each other’s talents
they bring to the table.
It’s well paced and plotted and as brutally honest as Strike
can be, it’s also refreshing to read a story where the reader has to question
whether they like the main lead or not. And it’s that balancing act that makes
Rowling an intriguing writer and Strike an original hero.
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