The Casual Vacancy
discussion
You only like it because JKR wrote it....

Read it for you. If you like it or not, be honest with yourself. Never mind the advice you get otherwise.

As always reading is a personal choice and I do wish JKR every success with whatever she decides to write about. It just didn't ring my bell... sorry

I finished the book but I did not like it. I found it drawn out, depressing on an epic level, and I didn't particularly like a single character. I feel the book did resemble JKR in writing style, detail, etc so from that aspect, I appreciated the writing.
I will continue to read any JKR books in the future but The Casual Vacancy was not for me.



I did really like the climax, which is depressing, but I'm not sure the trip was really worth it.





fortunately for me i was reading it at the time i tore my ligaments in my ankle so i had to spend 2 days laid up in bed. i spent those two days reading it unstoppably and had a great time
but if you don't like it, don't read it. there are so many other books to read and life is too short for a shit book

A storyless story, by the way, is a story with no point, or logical flow or ending. There were a couple of examples in Thomas' work but the one I like best is called the Zen Tea Shop. It is a tea shop in the Himalayas, where should you go for tea you will get sound advice, if you go for advice they will chase you with hot pokers. That's the entire story (I like how short it is too).
I didn't like Our Tragic Universe so much, but having read it meant I realised pretty early on that Rowling was writing her own one, which may be why I found it easier to digest maybe? Because I got that the rules were out of the window, so I didn't have a lot of expectation for a rounded conclusion or moral epiphanies or anything.

I like fantasy, and I like gritty, super-realistic novels about contemporary life. You don't usually get the same author writing both, and some readers don't like both. Or, you might like one or the other of those genres and just not feel that JKR did either well (you might think HP is not a good fantasy, or that TCV is not a good contemporary novel). Reading is completely subjective ... people should stop judging other people's book choices.

I love Scarlett Thomas. I think her master piece to date is The End of Mr Y.

That's my favourite book of hers. I read pop co after and felt disappointed that it didn't touch the end of mr Y, but I loved all the stuff about ciphers, letter frequency and prime numbers, was so interesting.

Except, JKR had a point, logical flow, and an ending.

Except, JKR had a point, logical flow, and an ending."
In that it ended, but it wasn't a rounded ending, with all loose ties wrapped up. Was Terri still using? How did Parminder handle the next time she met with any of the council? Will Shirley ever get divorced, or confront Maureen properly? Would Fats start treating others with respect? Would Andrew still have to move, or did his father stop beating him up? I can't remember her name, but would the social worker stay when Gary has broken up with her and her cases have been taken back over by the actual social worker?
Those are only the questions I can think of months after reading. And even the example I used, it had a deeper meaning, the point of the storyless story is that it is missing only one of those elements from the actual text, but it's there to provoke thought from the reader, so yes, I totally believe that's what Rowling's done.

I liked popco. I think she'd be hard press to duplicate something as good as Mr Y. I just read wild things and, it was a good story but felt unfinished in the end. There were too many questions left unanswered. You don't really get an answer as to what the book was all about :/ I recommend it but it's not her best.

Except, JKR had a point, logical flow, and an ending."
In that it ended, b..."
Most books have loose ends where the characters are concerned. Unless the author goes for a "rocks fall and everyone dies" ending, the characters lives continue on and the reader is left to speculate what happens next.
Not everything is going to tie up neatly, especially when some of the characters have issues that don't tie up neatly. Drug abuse, for example. Giving Terri a neat ending, without killing her, would have been unrealistic, severely truncated, or added at least another hundred pages to the book.

I didn't finish it, not because it wasn't HP but because Robbie was the only character I cared even a little bit about. This book seemed similar to the Barbara Pym books I read back when I was in high school--I don't go near them now.
As I told someone else there are several authors I follow where I only read 1 or 2 of their series as I don't like the others.




I may have been more likely to have bought the book because I have been impressed by Rowling's previous writings.
I *liked* the book because it was well-written with a moving story.
Don't effing try to tell me why I liked a book.






Personally, I was a fan of HP as a kid--I started reading it when I was 11. Now I'm 25 and would not have wanted another HP. I really liked this one and definitely did not dislike all the characters. (Who wants to read about perfect people anyway?)


I had a really hard time reading this book. I considered abandoning it several times but I was told it was worth the wait. It took about 150 pages for it to finally come together. I was so annoyed with a new introduction of a new character every 10-15 pages. I couldn't get invested in the characters. But I did push through and the ending was really great. After that painful period the book was no longer a chore.

Well, JKR really surprised me. I adore her writing style and I couldn't help but get drawn in by it and the picture she had painted for me Pagford and her citizens. I wasn't expecting anything at all like Harry Potter, but there are similarities I will say that. Not on a magical, full-fledged hunt on behalf of a villain trying to kill a hero, no. It's themes are adult, as most of the subject matter, not to mention the language used by most of the characters.
What makes it difficult is that it holds up a mirror and shows us the ugly side of ourselves. From Fats Wall being a complete ass to everybody else, the Simon Price's of the world, and the quiet suffering in silence like Sooks Jawanda.
Read the book for it's own sake, and take from it what you will. But it isn't another Harry Potter, where magic is used to help ease the blow of all the ugliness in the world. Rowling serves it up point blank, black and white. I think her intention was to really make her readers uncomfortable.
I know I was.



I totally agree with you.

There goes another one. Is it so hard to believe that people didn't like the book just because they didn't like it? I can list numerous things I didn't like and people such as yourself still won't believe that there are others out there who just found the book appalling.
I resolved to attempting to finish the book as so many people tell me the ending is worth the long haul. If my opinion changes along the way then so be it, but at present, for me, the book has few redeeming attributes.

Thank you for your [rather rude] response. What I was trying to say is that, yes, people probably didn't like it. You didn't, many of the people here didn't, and for various reasons. People are going to dislike any book, no one book can be universally liked.
But the reality is that your assumption is wrong. 'You only like it because JKR wrote it...' Um, no, sorry, I like it because it was a deep psychological thriller with a complex web of characters, that had a great deal to say about the society we live in, and the moral implications of that.
Yes, I BOUGHT it mainly because JKR wrote it, I probably wouldn't have known it existed otherwise. But what I'm saying is that 95 per cent of people who have read this book to date probably bought it for the same reason. And this is why so many people don't like it. It's not what they were expecting.
However, my assumption that you only dislike it only because JKR wrote it is quite ignorant. But would you or I or many other people be reading it if JKR hadn't [and somebody else had]? I doubt it.
I'd like to know what you actually don't like about. I actually believe you don't like it for your own reasons, and you're obviously completely entitled to that. But I'm allowed to like it for my own reasons, and I find it quite offensive and close-minded for you to tell me I only liked it because JKR wrote it.


The reality is, I never did think people only liked because JKR wrote it. I said so in the OP.

I actually did read your entire post before commenting the first time but the fact that you have called this thread 'You only like it because JKR wrote it...' indicates to me that you're basically trying to incite anger in people and lead them to post without getting all the information.
I'm very interested in having an intelligent debate with you about the book and its faults [because it does have them]. But it seems all you want to do is get people to disagree with your broad statement and then treat them with contempt.
Also, if you choose to reply, you might want to read the rest of my last post, especially the last paragraph. I think we both agree that it would be quite hypocritical not to, as I too am 'not interested in a discussion with anyone who doesn't take all the information into account.'

My post was worded deliberately but not with the intention of annoying people, with the intention of avoiding huge conversations with people who just refuse to communicate :)
I invite you to PM me about this book, some of the most interesting discussions i've had on here have come from people who disagreed with me. Hopefully I can show you that your assumptions of me are wrong, in the mean time I will explain why I dislike the book, you seem quite.interested in my opinion :) a truce I hope.




My reading is very much sci/fi fantasy with a little diversion here and there. I did like the book, it made me cringe in places, disturbed me in others and whilst I thought overall the story really didn't go anywhere, it was like the literary equivalent of Jeremy Kyle with - "the whole being greater than the sum of its dramas"
Great stuff and certainly a talking point with my other reading friends who don't share my love of dragons, intergalactic conquest and Aliens...

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It seems to me the only people comparing it to HP are those who liked the book and are defending it to those who don't. I've given several reasons for why I don't like the book but still I'm told it's because I expected another HP. It's becoming tedious and makes as much sense as me accusing fans of liking the book purely because JKR wrote it. For the record I expected a book as far from HP as one could possibly imagine. We were told what the book was about and I was aware of this before I picked it up. I still don't like the book and probably never will unless something drastically changes.
Anyone else find that they are being bombarded with people telling them that they don't like the book because they expected Harry Potter?