Career of Evil kicks off (sorry) with a woman's severed leg. It is delivered in a package to Robin Ellacott, an amiable and efficient young woman who is the new-ish assistant of private detective Cormoran Strike. You'd think it would be difficult to work out who on earth would want to send you this kind of gift. But Strike can immediately think of four people in his past who could be responsible. That is a lot of people to know who would send you a severed limb. But he is that sort of man.
Welcome to part three of the story of J.K. Rowling as crime writer. It's a pretty good story in itself: best-selling writer attempts to reinvent herself under the radar and is outed almost instantly. Published in 2013, The Cuckoo's Calling by "Robert Galbraith, a former plain clothes Royal Military Police investigator who had left in 2003 to work in the civilian security industry", was suspiciously accomplished for a debut novel and sold an estimated 1500 copies. But Rowling's cover was blown within weeks. Sales soared by 4000 per cent.
Two years later and The Cuckoo's Calling and The Silkworm have sold more than 1.5 million copies and the series is being developed for BBC One. So the stakes are high for book three. Can "Robert" (whom Rowling calls "my friend" on Twitter) do it again? And yet, in another sense, could there be any less pressure on the author?
The first two books were universally well received. And it's not exactly as if the storytelling skills of Rowling's "friend" are in doubt.
On the other hand, the Cormoran Strike novels have been described by even hardened crime fans as "macabre". One online review of The Silkworm complains of "excessive references to Strike's prosthesis". Strike lost part of his right leg in an explosion while on active service in Afghanistan. (The prosthesis, removed for the - thankfully infrequent - sex scenes, is a big part of his character.) The prosthesis-averse are definitely not the target market for this book, which is all about acrotomophilia: "A paraphilia in which sexual gratification is derived from fantasies or acts involving an amputee."