Regina's Reviews > The Casual Vacancy
The Casual Vacancy
by
by
Regina's review
bookshelves: favorite-authors, audio-also-listened-to, listened-to-audio-only, only-listeneed-to, favorites, literature, narration-is-great
Apr 21, 2012
bookshelves: favorite-authors, audio-also-listened-to, listened-to-audio-only, only-listeneed-to, favorites, literature, narration-is-great
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Casual Vacancy is a beautifully written work of art. Nothing has been missed in the story. No storyline was neglected. Every character and every scene is perfectly orchestrated to completion. Reading Casual Vacancy is like eating that perfect meal. It starts off with an explosion of flavor, akin to a beautifully prepared appetizer and from there Rowling guides the reader through a perfectly told story that is nicely sustained. A good story is one that the reader does not want to put down, but is not forced to rush through. It is a story that once over, its characters will be missed. And once completed, the storyline line and messages are still being contemplated in the minds of its readers. This is the brilliance of Casual Vacancy.
What about the bad reviews? What about all the readers who put it down out of what they said was disappointment and boredom? I was not dissuaded or discouraged when I read the very first publicized negative reactions to Casual Vacancy or heard from various friends and other reviewers, “My friend started this and was bored so she put it down”. Harry Potter had such huge wide spread appeal that it makes sense that many of her former fans would give this a try or think about giving it a try, but Casual Vacancy – while nearly perfectly written in my opinion – is not a book that will have wide spread appeal. Despite my opinion on this, Casual Vacancy does have staying power and it has its own beauty. The thing about Harry Potter is that all sorts of readers consumed it. And all sorts of non-readers read it. To please that type of audience would take something like, well the Hunger Games to satisfy everyone. But that is not being fair to Harry Potter and its fans, Hunger Games (in my opinion) while fun and very good, does not come close to the brilliance of the Harry Potter series (and if you have only read the first one or two in the series, then you have no idea what I mean … read the later ones!). My point – Casual Vacancy is not a repeat of Harry Potter in terms of having wide spread appeal.
At the risk of being confusing and contradictory – Casual Vacancy is very similar to Harry Potter. Whaatttt????
For readers of the entire series of Harry Potter, I am confident what remains with them even years after reading the books are the characters – the depth of the individuals developed, their struggles with moral dilemmas, the depiction of how absolutely horrible human beings can be to others when given the opportunity, their personal losses and their small victories. That is what I remember, more than any complicated mythology behind wands and horcruxes – I remember the characters. The Harry Potter books are immense in length and the story takes 7 books to tell, because it is the characters’ stories that filled the pages.
Casual Vacancy appears to be set in a nearly perfect setting: a small town where people know each other and have for generations. This is a town that is not war torn, is not fighting a famine or dangerous gangs and is not facing a spiraling out of control crime rate. This book does not have an external pressure affecting its characters or a complicated plot line each is struggling through. What this story comes down to is just the people appearing on the pages of the book and how people live their lives, how people treat each other, and what motivates them to act. The story is told from the alternating third person point of view a large number of characters. At first, keeping track of each character is task. I actually kept a cheat sheet. However, after about 10% of the book each character was solidly embedded and I no longer needed my notes. In the beginning of the story, it first appears that all of the characters are somehow involved with one main character that has died. And yes, while that is true they have that in common, that is not really the point – the point is not their connection but their own individual stories.
The characters in Casual Vacancy are each trapped in their own universe of interests, surrounded by their own self focused motives. They cannot seem to see beyond their own pain and struggles and because of this, they don’t see those who truly need help. There are heartbreaking scenes in this book, but they are essential to go through because it is a forcing of the reader to notice the pain of others – in a way that many of us probably do not in real life. This book provides an amazing lesson to each of us and is inspiring. Stop, open our eyes, help those around us, see people from their perspective instead of judging.
Who would enjoy this book? Readers that enjoy literary fiction, character studies or societal observations . This book is not an adventure tale nor is it a story with a beginning, middle and end. It is a window into the lives of a small town – the readers get a glimpse and then it is over. Readers looking for a tight resolution, a beautiful and satisfying end, and the triumph of good over evil should not attempt Casual Vacancy. They will be disappointed. This is not a book to be skimmed, but instead it is one to be immersed in and it takes awhile to get through. So patient readers are needed as well. I plan on re-reading this book and I anxiously wait for Rowling’s next effort.
Casual Vacancy is a beautifully written work of art. Nothing has been missed in the story. No storyline was neglected. Every character and every scene is perfectly orchestrated to completion. Reading Casual Vacancy is like eating that perfect meal. It starts off with an explosion of flavor, akin to a beautifully prepared appetizer and from there Rowling guides the reader through a perfectly told story that is nicely sustained. A good story is one that the reader does not want to put down, but is not forced to rush through. It is a story that once over, its characters will be missed. And once completed, the storyline line and messages are still being contemplated in the minds of its readers. This is the brilliance of Casual Vacancy.
What about the bad reviews? What about all the readers who put it down out of what they said was disappointment and boredom? I was not dissuaded or discouraged when I read the very first publicized negative reactions to Casual Vacancy or heard from various friends and other reviewers, “My friend started this and was bored so she put it down”. Harry Potter had such huge wide spread appeal that it makes sense that many of her former fans would give this a try or think about giving it a try, but Casual Vacancy – while nearly perfectly written in my opinion – is not a book that will have wide spread appeal. Despite my opinion on this, Casual Vacancy does have staying power and it has its own beauty. The thing about Harry Potter is that all sorts of readers consumed it. And all sorts of non-readers read it. To please that type of audience would take something like, well the Hunger Games to satisfy everyone. But that is not being fair to Harry Potter and its fans, Hunger Games (in my opinion) while fun and very good, does not come close to the brilliance of the Harry Potter series (and if you have only read the first one or two in the series, then you have no idea what I mean … read the later ones!). My point – Casual Vacancy is not a repeat of Harry Potter in terms of having wide spread appeal.
At the risk of being confusing and contradictory – Casual Vacancy is very similar to Harry Potter. Whaatttt????
For readers of the entire series of Harry Potter, I am confident what remains with them even years after reading the books are the characters – the depth of the individuals developed, their struggles with moral dilemmas, the depiction of how absolutely horrible human beings can be to others when given the opportunity, their personal losses and their small victories. That is what I remember, more than any complicated mythology behind wands and horcruxes – I remember the characters. The Harry Potter books are immense in length and the story takes 7 books to tell, because it is the characters’ stories that filled the pages.
Casual Vacancy appears to be set in a nearly perfect setting: a small town where people know each other and have for generations. This is a town that is not war torn, is not fighting a famine or dangerous gangs and is not facing a spiraling out of control crime rate. This book does not have an external pressure affecting its characters or a complicated plot line each is struggling through. What this story comes down to is just the people appearing on the pages of the book and how people live their lives, how people treat each other, and what motivates them to act. The story is told from the alternating third person point of view a large number of characters. At first, keeping track of each character is task. I actually kept a cheat sheet. However, after about 10% of the book each character was solidly embedded and I no longer needed my notes. In the beginning of the story, it first appears that all of the characters are somehow involved with one main character that has died. And yes, while that is true they have that in common, that is not really the point – the point is not their connection but their own individual stories.
The characters in Casual Vacancy are each trapped in their own universe of interests, surrounded by their own self focused motives. They cannot seem to see beyond their own pain and struggles and because of this, they don’t see those who truly need help. There are heartbreaking scenes in this book, but they are essential to go through because it is a forcing of the reader to notice the pain of others – in a way that many of us probably do not in real life. This book provides an amazing lesson to each of us and is inspiring. Stop, open our eyes, help those around us, see people from their perspective instead of judging.
Who would enjoy this book? Readers that enjoy literary fiction, character studies or societal observations . This book is not an adventure tale nor is it a story with a beginning, middle and end. It is a window into the lives of a small town – the readers get a glimpse and then it is over. Readers looking for a tight resolution, a beautiful and satisfying end, and the triumph of good over evil should not attempt Casual Vacancy. They will be disappointed. This is not a book to be skimmed, but instead it is one to be immersed in and it takes awhile to get through. So patient readers are needed as well. I plan on re-reading this book and I anxiously wait for Rowling’s next effort.
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Reading Progress
April 21, 2012
– Shelved
April 21, 2012
– Shelved as:
favorite-authors
October 4, 2012
–
Started Reading
October 4, 2012
– Shelved as:
audio-also-listened-to
October 4, 2012
– Shelved as:
only-listeneed-to
October 4, 2012
– Shelved as:
listened-to-audio-only
October 11, 2012
–
30.0%
"How awful it was ... the tiny ghosts of your living children haunted your heart. They could never know and would hate it if they did, how their growing was a constant bereavement."
October 11, 2012
–
32.0%
"For it was wonderful how you could obscure an emotional issue by appearing to seek precision."
October 13, 2012
–
40.0%
October 15, 2012
–
70.0%
October 17, 2012
–
90.0%
October 19, 2012
– Shelved as:
narration-is-great
October 19, 2012
– Shelved as:
literature
October 19, 2012
– Shelved as:
favorites
October 19, 2012
–
Finished Reading
Comments Showing 1-25 of 25 (25 new)
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Tika
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Jun 27, 2012 10:00AM
insane price for an ebook!
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Curious if you'll like it. A friend of mine loves the author and couldn't get into it after a few chapters so put it down.
Sherri I know! Jill, does your friend enjoy literary fiction? This is definitely literary fiction. I am really liking it.
Nope. I have been reading Kindle books since 2008 and I don't care who or what book it is, $20 is WAY too much for a book you can't transfer, lend, sell or use on any and every device you own.
I agree as well. I would feel so much freer in my ebook purchases if I could transfer, sell and loan my rights to it.
I am thankful that I read Fantasy. Tor publishing has removed all DRM on all their books including Kindle ebooks. I will pay a higher price for books that are 'mine' and not rented/licensed as all other ebooks seem to be.
Fab review Regina, I am definitely putting this on top of my tbr list! And also I now have the urge to reread HP again LOL!
My nine year old is reading this series right now, he just finished #4. And my 13 year old read it about 4 years ago. I feel like when the re-read it, I am sort of re-reading it along with them -- well okay, I did read #1 and #2 outloud to him, so I guess I did. :) You should definitely re-read it. I would start with #3 or #4 -- that series is such an amazing work of art!
Aw that's nice! I read HP to my little sister, Chamber of Secrets always reminds me of her. I keep thinking of skipping directly to Azkaban, but I might do a quick skim read of 1 and 2 first, get in the HP zone lol
That is so sweet you read it to your little sis! :)
My son was amazed at how different #4 is, there is definitely a shift. But the first two are sweet and fun too.
My son was amazed at how different #4 is, there is definitely a shift. But the first two are sweet and fun too.
I think it was less me being nice and more that there was one book between the two of us and I read a lot faster then her, so compromise!
Yeah, I love that the books kind of grow up and evolve with the gang, the difference between Philosophers Stone and Deathly Hallows is huge. I always thought the third book was the turning point of the books, when they became that little bit deeper.
Yeah, I love that the books kind of grow up and evolve with the gang, the difference between Philosophers Stone and Deathly Hallows is huge. I always thought the third book was the turning point of the books, when they became that little bit deeper.
I agree, 3 is definitely the turning point and #4 is the full on new phase.
Haha about there being just one book between the two of you. :)
Haha about there being just one book between the two of you. :)
Yeah, I was lapping up the Hermione and Ron stuff in book 4! I swear when they kissed in the last book I did a little victory dance lol!
Lol! There were actually three of us, but luckily my brother had already read it.
Lol! There were actually three of us, but luckily my brother had already read it.
I am glad I read your review of this. I wanted to read this as I am not a fan of Harry Potter and was really excited when she cae out with something more adult oriented. I have heard so many mixed reviews about this book.
Lorrea(Threein3) wrote: "I am glad I read your review of this. I wanted to read this as I am not a fan of Harry Potter and was really excited when she cae out with something more adult oriented. I have heard so many mixe..."
Be wary if you do. I am a reader who enjoys "literary fiction, character studies or societal observations" and I found this book VERY difficult to get through. I thought there characters were extremely flat and thoroughly unlikeable, and I was completely uninvested in their petty, stupid, selfish lives. This book is in NO WAY similar to Harry Potter (except that it's a book and it has characters in it that do things, I guess). If it didn't have JK's name splashed on the cover and flaunted all over the place, I would never have guessed it was written by her, and probably never even read it (which would have been very nice), as I doubt most people ever would have.
Be wary if you do. I am a reader who enjoys "literary fiction, character studies or societal observations" and I found this book VERY difficult to get through. I thought there characters were extremely flat and thoroughly unlikeable, and I was completely uninvested in their petty, stupid, selfish lives. This book is in NO WAY similar to Harry Potter (except that it's a book and it has characters in it that do things, I guess). If it didn't have JK's name splashed on the cover and flaunted all over the place, I would never have guessed it was written by her, and probably never even read it (which would have been very nice), as I doubt most people ever would have.