Stayed up way late last night (nothing unusual about that) and finished “The Casual Vacancy.” I reached that point where you’re so close to the end, you don’t dare put it down.
Adventure stories have a chase scene near the end, to step up the tempo and raise the suspense.
Mysteries have a detective following the evidence, piecing it together, closer and closer, the danger mounting, until . . .
J.K. Rowling’s wounded and wounding humans wander in circles, running away, crossing paths, reversing direction . . . not seeing the obvious until it’s too late . . . the sirens come . . . bringing them all together, sort of, . . . and they find themselves . . . and each other . . . or not.
Whew! A great novel. Now all I have to do is find time to write a review that’s worthy of the author, the book, and the characters.
— John
Related articles
- J.K. Rowling tackles her next chapter with The Casual Vacancy (cbc.ca)
- So Many Books, So Little Time (johnhaydeninmd.com)
The subject is class warfare and classism. Ms. Rowling’s story takes place in England, and you have to remember that the British and Europeans are not as squeamish about class issues as we Americans. Until recently, we’ve been in full denial.