Tag: Robert Galbraith

Robert Galbraith – The Silkworm | Review

Title: The Silkworm

Author: Robert Galbraith

Type: Fiction

Page Count/Review Word Count: 456

Rating: 4/5

 

Robert Galbraith - The Silkworm

Robert Galbraith – The Silkworm

 

The first thing to mention is that Robert Galbraith is J. K. Rowling’s pseudonym, and so in many ways you know what you’re getting here. If you’ve read Rowling’s work before – and let’s face it, you should have – then you know that her name alone is a guarantee of a certain level of quality right from the get go. Unfortunately, in many ways, that acts against her – it sets expectations high, and it also biases the reader before they get started. I suspect that that’s why she started using her pseudonym in the first place.

With that out of the way, we can start to talk about the story line. This book is the second of three that follows the adventures of private detective Cormoran Strike, and while I managed to read the three of them out of order, it doesn’t necessarily matter. Sure, the story of Strike’s life follows from one book to another, but seeing as the man is pretty much consumed by his work, it’s only a minor detail.

In this book, Strike – and his assistant, Robin – are recruited to investigate the disappearance of a writer called Owen Quine, who’s managed to offend almost the entire literary world with his constant shenanigans. Quine was gearing up to release a new novel and disappeared just when he was due to release it, and his long-suffering wife asks Strike and Robin to investigate his disappearance.

 

J. K. Rowling

J. K. Rowling

 

And then Quine is found dead. Personally, I’d call that a spoiler because it doesn’t happen until about a third of the way through the book, but it’s revealed on the rear cover and so I guess I can say it. That annoyed me – it basically made me feel as though the first chunk of the novel was really just a long rehash of what was on the rear cover, and I was impatient for the body to be discovered so that I could find out what happened next.

It was also a little too meta for my preference – in writing about Quine, Rowling herself took the chance to take a few shots at the industry, and I’ve always felt a little bit weird about it when writers write about writers. Stephen King does it all of the time, to the point at which it starts to feel cliche or self-indulgent, but he also usually pulls it off and Rowling/Galbraith did it here, too.

Overall then, this is a very respectable crime novel and certainly worth a 4/5. However, I also thought it was the weakest in the trilogy, and not as good as some of the other books on the market.

 

J. K. Rowling

J. K. Rowling

 

Click here to buy The Silkworm.


Stephen King – Mr. Mercedes | Review

Title: Mr. Mercedes

Author: Stephen King

Type: Fiction

Page Count/Review Word Count: 424

Rating: 5*/5

 

Stephen King - Mr. Mercedes

Stephen King – Mr. Mercedes

 

In one word, faultless. This book combines all of the goodness of a Stephen King novel with all of the entertainment of a crime thriller which leaves the reader genuinely stuck turning the pages. I mean, I’ll admit that I’m a big Stephen King fan to begin with, but still – this was something else, a sort of weird hybrid of writing styles that left me feeling as though the book had been written specifically for me.

This book is the first in King’s Bill Hodges series, and it follows the story of a retired detective who is so bored with life that he’s on the brink of suicide; until the “perk” of one of his unfinished cases comes to light and without actually threatening to repeat his actions, somehow threatens to repeat his actions.

Hodges – first name, ‘Kermit‘, but you can call him Bill – teams up with a couple of unlikely allies in a story that will literally make you angry because you have to put it down. Unless you’ve got at least six hours to set aside to read then you’re not going to be able to read it in one sitting, And that’s a shame, because you’re going to want to, but that’s not the book’s fault – it’s your fault.

 

Stephen King Quote

Stephen King Quote

 

In fact, I’d go so far as to say, objectively speaking, that this is quite possibly the best book to read if you’re not sure where to start with Stephen King. The fact is, not only is it accessible and well-written, but also it’s just undeniably King – so typical of him, and yet so stunning, so surprising.

I was also impressed with how vivid and evocative the story is. It’s easy to imagine every single scene, and while you do see things coming from time to time, it’s not enough to ruin the story and besides – King doesn’t use cliches. He invents them. He suffers from a sort of unique curse that you can witness by the way that every time he writes an original story, it gets repeated again and again until it enters popular culture.

Overall then, read this book. Seriously, read it. As much as I’ve been loving Arthur Conan Doyle and Agatha Christie, as well as Peter James and even J. K. Rowling’s Robert Galbraith books, this is something else. A crime thriller that really thrills while gripping you from start to finish. What more could you possibly want?

 

Stephen King Quote

Stephen King Quote

 

Click here to buy Mr. Mercedes.