The Casual Vacancy
discussion
Ask J.K. Rowling a Question About The Casual Vacancy
message 851:
by
Ham
(new)
-
rated it 1 star
Jul 04, 2013 06:32PM

reply
|
flag








The Casual Vacancy, however, does not view society as willing to change for the better. As the end of the novel, everything is the same. Though the characters aren't inherently static, Shirley doesn't seem to care that two children are dead--she still assumes the poor take what is rightfully hers. While some families and individuals seem to be patching themselves up (especially Samantha Mollision), the congregation still adverted their eyes to a mother in suffering.
So my question is this: which do you think is a better portrayal of reality? Can mother's love really save a child's life and can that same child go onto offer the murderer forgiveness in battle? Or are all the stars dead and we can't bear to think about it, as Tessa expresses?
I'm asking because I can't reconcile how the two books are written by the same author. Then again, I enjoy each unconditionally. Maybe I'm asking because I don't know how to make up my mind about what type of world we essentially live in.





My question is what did inspire you to write it and why did you decide to write a more into adult type book instead of child book, like Harry Potter. Was it because all the Harry Potter fans have grown up so the book can suit their era as in now? and was it hard for you to write something really different from Harry Potter, like without having to involve any "magic" on the plot of The Casual Vacancy?
I hope you will answer my question. Anyway, I just want to say to your writings have inspired me a lot. Thank you so much for giving a magical childhood for all of us and don't stop writing.
Love,
Karen




I think a mentoring program is an amazing idea.Perfect for young writers! (Including me!) :D




Calling her book "crap" and not asking a real question leads me to believe you aren't quite capable of basic understanding of good literature.

Do you have a set procedure for writing characters? Each of the characters in "The Casual Vacancy" seems very real, very human. How do you do that?

Loved the book by the way!



I love how you can make believable characters inside and outside of Hogwarts. The Casual Vacancy, to me, very much showed that you are truly capable of writing in any genre or about any subject.
Do you feel like expanding even more and giving us some literature in another genre like historical fiction, science fiction, or horror?


What inspired you to write The Casual Vacancy? Since it is different from Harry Potter, what helped you in the writing of The Casual Vacancy?



Great question! I hope this one gets shortlisted, I'd like to know the answer!



all discussions on this book
|
post a new topic
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone (other topics)
The Casual Vacancy (other topics)
The Casual Vacancy (other topics)
J.K. Rowling (other topics)
Books mentioned in this topic
The Casual Vacancy (other topics)Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone (other topics)
The Casual Vacancy (other topics)
The Casual Vacancy (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
J.K. Rowling (other topics)J.K. Rowling (other topics)