The Cuckoo's Calling
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**spoiler alert** So can we actually talk about the book? Specifically, the ending.
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David
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May 24, 2014 06:22PM

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Also I'm pretty sure that John knew the name of Jonah, Lula's natural brother, because he checked the newspaper on news of Afghanistan to see if he had (conveniently) died.
I thought the murderer was Tony for a long time! And I guessed that the security guard had something to do with it.. so the ending took me by total surprise!


Interesting comment-I was trying to find fault with the others as well. Lord knows that bunch was screwed up enough to kill someone.

Haha yes, yes they all were. I was kind of hesitant to read that book in the first place but once I started it I couldn't stop.


Also a thing that confused me, Wilson the security guy was he connected in some way to Lula's biologi..."
I wondered about that, but I don't think he has anything to do with the brother. I loved the book and found it a really good read, especially the characterisation, but I found this long-lost brother thing a bit odd. My money were on the chauffeur, not sure if the adopted brother made much sense. Surely you would just keep quiet in a situation like that?


A lot of people really enjoyed this novel. I think people should be allowed to make up their own minds about whether or not they want to read it to be fair...



That's an interesting point, but I don't think so. Tony had reason to think Jon killed Charlie. He had no reason to suspect Jon in Lula's death. He had lots of reasons to believe Lula killed herself. All he had on Jon is that he lied about where he was. Tony also lied about where he was, so he may have thought Jon had similarly minor reasons for the lie.



I still don't know why Rochelle's phone was in the safe/


You know what? I think a big part of his appeal to readers is that he seems like a real person. Personally, I've always had a thing for smart men. There's a review of either "Cuckoo's Calling" or the "The Silkworm" that expresses annoyance at Strike's perfection. I almost fell out of my chair when I read that.

I think it was the teeth :-)



I think you are insulting Doyle and Christie. This book was terribly plotted. It was an okay read, at best. The plot was just ho-hum, which is why it escaped public notice until the author's identity was " leaked".


I am hesitating as for what the Silkworm would be worth reading or not. Don't want to suffer another "heartbreaking" by the huge disappointment of the ending. At least for people like me, who love tight logic without obvious loophole, this detective serie started with discourangement from more. (The Casual Vacancy was much better in the sense of proper reality).

We never found out what Robin was supposed to see in the two different photographs of building 18 that was going to prepare her for detective school. Was there an image of John looking out of the window of the 2nd floor apartment he was hiding in all day?
Cormoran went to the police and told them Rochelle was blackmailing Lula's killer. Strike had her phone number, and Lula's family were still paying for the account. Couldn't the police have found out who she has been speaking to simply by getting that information through her cellphone provider? You don't actually need a physical phone to find that kind information out. Cormoran could have pressed the police to look into that but didn't, and the police were supposed to known for being so thorough. I guess if the police did find John's phone number in Rochelle's phone records the story would have ended a lot sooner, or it would have made the readers more suspicious of John.
All in all, I loved the book and I couldn't put it down. I am so pleased I get to continue to enjoy JK Rowling's incredible writing.

We never found out what Robin was supposed to see in the two different photographs of building 18 that was going to prepar..."
I wondered about that too! What was in those photographs!
I also wondered why Strike was so relieved Bristow showed up to his office first out of all the possible people who might have come. Because getting the confession would have been easier without Landry or Allison making it dramatic?
My final confusion from reading most of the discussion on here about John knowing about the half-brother but not being able to find him is related to his reaction to the newspaper picture of the black solider. I thought he reacted poorly to the picture not because he thought it was Wilson's son, but because he was hoping it was Jonah Ageyman and he had been killed in action thus, making the second will a moot point. So he must have known who and where he was, thus not really needing Strike to locate him so John could knock him off something high too, but rather so he could make the connection and get the wrong man convicted for murder. Right?



probably her agent urged her to write a will for a just in situation.

Good point to make - that very thought crossed my mind too but then it flitted off again ;-)

On the subject of how Strike could be attractive to women, we mostly have his view of how ugly and fat he is. Maybe a bit from Robin, but what she admires about him is his brain (and his profession). One thing that could have been attractive to the supermodel is that Strike didn't care a bit about celebrity. Most people who met the model would fall all over themselves telling her how great she is or trying to show how great they are. Strike didn't care a bit, he's totally cool, which may have been a nice switch. With his family past, it's understandable that he is unimpressed by celebrities.

That whole being naked on the balcony thing literally came out of thin air and I started to think I'd skipped some pages, then there's the part where Strike admits there wasn't a photo, he just made that up to fit in with his theory. It would have been better if the reader was taken along on how he came to this theory."
I agree with this. I had the same feelings about the almost naked Tansy on the balcony and I thought I just missed some pages. That part of plot appeared out of sudden but... This part let us think that the murder wasn't Freddie because he was into his other business and his behavior neither showed he could have hidden something due to Lula's death. At least I think so...
By the way, on the 30-something page, when John Bristow was talking about Lula and the crime, he revealed sort of strange behavior and I thought "well, great, you can be this murderer as well" because of his innocent behaviour and then an attack of anger. But then I thought he is too lame to do it, but then again, his effort to stop Strike from talking to Rochelle, his silence while Strike found out somebody deleted the photos...
And, did you notice how John tried to wake Strike's sympathy for him by telling him constantly about his ill mother? Like "you know, my mother is so weak, she feels very bad today blablabla...." or "Don't go to my mother without me" and Strike didn't feel sorry, that lighed up a red light in my head, seriously.
Strike neither felt sympathy for Lady Bristow, he seemed to be repulsed by her, can someone please tell me, why? It was not her fault she raised up a psycho and she didn't lie to Strike, or maybe I missunderstood something there?
The book was great. I couldn't stop reading and I loved the idea of Robin's happiness because of the engaging but then she pushed her private life in the background due to help Strike and care for him. So awesome, eventually they'll end up together, it's very possible.

1. Ursula May's affair with Tony
2. Bryonny (mis)reading Lula's will
3. Tansy being half-naked on the balcony when Lula fell (at best he could have guessed she was there, when Freddie had placed potted shrubs on the balcony to hide the truth)



Don't listen to this guy he is totally wrong, by the way, I have never read any of the Potter books. This is a fine novel nd am now reading Silkworm.

Stop wasting our time and take your trash elsewhere. This is for people wanting to discuss the book.

Career of Evil is the best of all!


It's the little things that sometimes bother me in mystery novels, even though I love the Strike series and have read all three multiple times.
In Cuckoo's Calling, Rowling/Galbraith makes a point of how freezing cold it was on the date of Lula’s death, and John certainly doesn't give the impression of someone who would ignore the elements with a macho mindset.
He set out that morning to talk to Lula, probably getting there by taxi. Don't you think he would have had an overcoat on? Then he left the building in the top-clothes (a hoody or light jacket that wouldn’t have hidden a coat) he lifted from the second floor apartment where he'd been hiding. So where did he stash the overcoat? That certainly would have been found.


John knew about Johan or else he wouldn't be looking through the news for a black soldier's death. So the remaining theory is that he wanted to frame him for Lula's murder but that does not make any sense either.
John would be the prime suspect in any investigation because he's the one who benefits most from his sister's death. There are multiple witnesses for them arguing and him asking her for money. It is easy for any detective to find out about his monetary status. He doesn't have a tight alibi (shouldn't the police have checked for CCTV footage of him going to his office or his mother's house to check his alibi?) and he actually appears in the CCTV footage he directed strike to investigate.
The only thing that would strongly incriminate Johan is the will, and the only one who knew about it, to John's knowledge, was Rochelle. So the logical thing for him, if he wanted to frame Johan, was to not respond to Rochelle's blackmailing but to tell her he only wants to find his sister's killer and connect her with a detective to tell her story about Johan. She is also the only witness that Lula was meeting Johan the same time she was killed.
Wanting to frame Johan and at the same time keeping the will hidden by shushing Rochelle is ridiculous.
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