Cormoran Strike

Cormoran Strike
Author J. K. Rowling (under the pseudonym Robert Galbraith)
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre Crime fiction, mystery
Publisher Sphere Books (Little, Brown and Company)
Published April 2013 - present
Media type Print (hardback & paperback)
Audiobook
E-book
No. of books 3 (currently)

Cormoran Strike is the eponymous hero of a series of crime fiction books written by British author J. K. Rowling, published under the pseudonym Robert Galbraith. The story chronicles the many cases of private investigator Strike and his assistant Robin Ellacott.

On 10 December 2014, it was announced that the novels would be adapted as a television series for BBC One.[1]

Plot

In 2010, Cormoran Strike—private investigator, ex-SIB investigator and the illegitimate son of a famous rock star (by an affair with a notorious groupie) who lost part of a leg in a bombing in Afghanistan—is broke, and his birth father's business agent is calling in the loan that he gave to Strike to open his office.

The first book is about how Strike is hired by John Bristow, the adopted brother of supermodel Lula Landry, who had fallen from her balcony three months previously. Bristow wants Strike to investigate his sister's supposed suicide. Strike also meets Robin Ellacott, who has been sent to be his temporary secretary despite the fact he can barely afford her. Robin has just become engaged to her longtime boyfriend Matthew, with a wedding set later that year. Although Strike only hires her for one week, she turns out to be much more competent than he expected, and they end up extending her stay.

Near the first book's end, before Robin leaves for her next job, Strike gives Robin a green silk dress she had tried on and loved when they had gone searching for information at a dress shop that Lula had frequented. Finally, the two decide that Robin will stay on.

The second book is about how Strike is approached by Leonora Quine with a plea to locate her husband, the notorious writer Owen Quine, who has disappeared without a trace. Quine, once hailed as one of the original literary rebels—presented as the literary world's version of music's punk rock scene—has struggled for years to recreate the success of his original novel and has fallen out of public view. Strike discovers that his disappearance coincides with the leak of the manuscript for his latest novel, Bombyx Mori. The London literary community considers Bombyx Mori to be unpublishable; an unpleasant mix of rape, sadomasochism, torture, necrophilia and cannibalism, the hero is eventually tricked and eaten alive by various characters who are thinly-veiled metaphors for people in Quine's life whom he considers responsible for the destruction of his career.

The third book tells how Robin receives a package from a courier containing a woman's severed right leg. The package is accompanied by a note quoting from the Blue Öyster Cult song "Mistress of the Salmon Salt (Quicklime Girl)", a tattoo that Strike's mother, a famous groupie and BÖC fan, had above her crotch. Because of that link, Strike told the police that he believed that the package had been sent by someone from his own past with a grudge against him.

Characters

Protagonists

Secondary characters

The Cuckoo's Calling

The Silkworm

Career of Evil

References

  1. "New details about J.K. Rowling's BBC series revealed". Entertainment Weekly's EW.com. Retrieved 2015-12-09.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, March 27, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.