Strike one: The Cuckoo’s Calling is a compelling debut. |
"You ought to give up detecting
and try fantasy
writing." Aha! I get that joke, a line from The Cuckoo's
Calling by J K Rowling's Robert Galbraith.
Of course, I'm sure I would have deduced the author's true identity, even without the media furore, from the following clues:
The men's pub toilet “smelled strongly of piss”? Of course it did; it was a men's pub toilet. And Galbraith spells ‘hiccoughing’ the old fashioned way; throughout the entirety of Harry Potter I thought the pupils of Hogwarts were doing some weird hiccup/cough hybrid. And I was like: they can't all be simultaneously hiccupping and coughing? This is a damn epidemic; off to Madam Pomfrey’s with the lot of them.
Of course, I'm sure I would have deduced the author's true identity, even without the media furore, from the following clues:
The men's pub toilet “smelled strongly of piss”? Of course it did; it was a men's pub toilet. And Galbraith spells ‘hiccoughing’ the old fashioned way; throughout the entirety of Harry Potter I thought the pupils of Hogwarts were doing some weird hiccup/cough hybrid. And I was like: they can't all be simultaneously hiccupping and coughing? This is a damn epidemic; off to Madam Pomfrey’s with the lot of them.
With the clues of stinky
pub piss; that only a female would note, and archaic orthographical preference
for spellings of involuntary bodily
functions, I am confident I would have deduced the true identity
of the author,
had I actually
read The Cuckoo’s Calling
before the big reveal on the news.
But then, doesn’t everybody
feel like they could unravel
a mystery after reading a good detective
novel? And this is a good detective
novel; with a good detective
in private investigator
Cormoran Strike.
In a world of celebrity media intrusion, social
networks, and the power to Google anything,
Galbraith shows how old-fashioned
gum-shoeing has a place in the information
age; the value of visiting
actual locations, gathering
actual physical evidence,
and pressing mopes for information
face-to-face.
In fact, Cormoran
Strike, the ex-army
man, is so damn good at his job I was grateful
for his sidekick,
who is a competent young professional; but no private
dick.
Every Batman
needs their Robin,
and Cormoran Strike has Robin
Ellacott; his temp agency secretary
who becomes embroiled
in Strike’s murder case.
Cormoran is a gifted
detective, but sleeps
in his office;
estranged from his girlfriend. While Robin
may do most of her sleuthing through
newspaper clippings, the relative togetherness
of her personal
life; recently engaged,
with job interviews
lined up, gives a counter-point
to the dishevelled
P.I.
Strike two: The Silkworm
out 19 June.
|
While there are shocks
and surprises, nothing
comes out of leftfield; the logic of the mystery
is consistent as the story unfurls.
There is an enormous
cast to keep track of, and just soo many conversations that the pace can drag; I’d like for some answers to be beaten
out quickly rather
than coaxed through
methodical interrogation.
But the relationship between
the P.I. and the temp-agency
worker gives a fresh feel to the detective/sidekick dynamic,
and looking at Galbraith’s London
through the private
eyes of the Strike
detective agency is always a joy.
4 stars
Loads of talking, but eventually some shagging, and a fight! |
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