Will you read The Casual Vacancy? (JK Rowling's new book)

I will and I’ll be able to read it not thinking about Harry Potter, so I can judge it on its own merits.

It comes out September 27.

Judging from what little is available at that link, it sounds like it’s a non-fantasy book about small-town politics? That’s not really my genre, so I’ll probably pass.

Then again, I suppose you could give the same description for To Kill a Mockingbird, which is excellent no matter its genre.

I like “passion, duplicity and unexpected revelations”, but the pre-order ebook price is $20 and no ebook will make it to the library since Hachette is the publisher, so I won’t be reading it any time soon.

No. From the plot summary it doesn’t sound like the kind of book I go for at all.

Unless it gets rave reviews in the “What Are You Reading…” threads, I doubt it.

The Plot summary doesn’t grab me either, and I was not impressed by Rowling as an author. so, no. my to-read list is so long already with books I’m excited about.

The Casual Vacancy sounds like a previously undiscovered Edward Gorey. I would read it if it was that.

No. I’m through with Rawling unless she does books chronicling Harry’s life between the final chapter of deathly hallows and the epilogue.

If Terry Pratchett wrote the same story set in Discworld, I’d read it and love it. Not so sure if I’d say the same if it’s set in the regular drama genre.

Not interested in the slightest.

Rowling knows how to write an entertaining pageturner; and some of my favorite authors have written in multiple genres; so this at least has the potential to be good. I’ll pay attention to what people say about the book, and if the reviews are positive enough, I’ll read it eventually.

Will it be as thick with adverb phrases as her [del]Tom Swift[/del] Harry Potter books? Have they finally found her an editor?

Really? An author is stuck writing about the same person for the rest of their writing career?They can never, ever, ever write anything else? Granted, most of my favorite authors have written long series of books about characters I’ve grown to know and love, but I don’t refuse to read P.D. James when she leaves Adam Dalgleish for a bit and wanders off to reinvent Elizabeth Bennet.

Why would she do that?

I’ll wait for the movie.