The Silkworm

The Silkworm

United States cover
Author Robert Galbraith
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre Crime fiction
Publisher Sphere Books
(Little, Brown & Company)
Publication date
19 June 2014
Pages 454
ISBN 978-1-4087-0402-8
Preceded by The Cuckoo's Calling
Followed by Career of Evil

The Silkworm is a 2014 crime fiction novel written by J. K. Rowling, published under the pseudonym Robert Galbraith. It is the second novel in the series featuring private investigator Cormoran Strike, and is a sequel to The Cuckoo's Calling (2013). It was followed by Career of Evil in 2015.

Title

The title of the novel is derived from the Bombyx mori, a silkworm that is boiled alive within its cocoon to preserve the silken threads of the cocoon when the worm is removed. Within the context of the novel, Bombyx Mori is the title of a controversial manuscript in which its protagonist, Bombyx, is a writer who is repeatedly abused, tormented and ultimately eaten alive by the people in his life whilst going to extraordinary lengths to capture and preserve his talent for their own selfish gains.

Plot summary

In the months following the successful resolution of the Lula Landry case, business has improved for private investigator Cormoran Strike. While handling a steady stream of divorce cases and the occasional job on behalf of a tabloid journalist, 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.

As Strike searches for Quine, his relationship with his assistant Robin Ellacott deteriorates, particularly after a disastrous meeting with her fiancé Matthew, who takes an immediate dislike to him. Robin feels neglected by Strike, stuck in the role of secretary when she aspires to be an investigator herself; for his part, Strike is unwilling to put Robin in a position where she is forced to choose between her fiancé and her job. Their growing animosity is tempered when Strike finds Quine's body in an abandoned house bound, disembowelled, doused in acid and posed like the centerpiece of a meal, a clear mirror of the final scene in Bombyx Mori.

Strike's investigation focuses on the seven people portrayed in the manuscript: his wife, Leonora; his lover, Kathryn Kent; his transgender protégée, Pippa Midgley; his harsh agent, Elizabeth Tassel; his alcoholic editor, Jerry Waldegrave; his publisher, Daniel Chard; and his former friend and fellow literary rebel, Michael Fancourt. As the police, led by Strike's friend Richard Anstis, zero in on Leonora as the killer and Strike tries to navigate the complex web of relationships in Quine's life, the other suspects turn on one another, accusing and counter-accusing each other of not only murdering Quine, but of ghostwriting part of Bombyx Mori as Waldegrave's character in the manuscript is inconsistent with his relationship to Quine.

The relationship between Matthew and Robin is further strained when Matthew's mother dies suddenly; Robin risks missing the funeral to help Strike, and is inadvertently caught lying about it by Matthew. Robin confronts Strike about his intentions for her job, with Strike warning her that if she chooses to become an investigator, she will be asked to do things that Matthew will not like. She emotionally agrees.

With the case against Leonora piling up, Strike focuses on Quine's relationship with Michael Fancourt, which grew icy after Fancourt's first wife Elspeth wrote a novel that was treated cruelly by critics. After an anonymous parody was released, Elspeth committed suicide, with Fancourt accusing Quine of authoring the parody and Tassel of enabling him. After angry encounters with Kathryn Kent and Pippa Midgely, Strike is further unable to explain inconsistencies between the original draft of Bombyx Mori and the final manuscript. At first he suspects an accomplice, but concludes that the entire manuscript was instead penned by a ghostwriter when he realises that Bombyx Mori is a metaphor for someone else's life and that Quine is intended as an antagonist within its pages rather than the hero.

With Robin's help, he develops a theory of the crime and confronts Fancourt at a party for another author. As they talk outside the party, Strike's real target, Elizabeth Tassel, joins them. It is revealed that she was a failed author before becoming an agent, and was responsible for the parody of Elspeth Fancourt's novel. Upon discovering this, Owen Quine blackmailed her to support his family (including his mentally handicapped daughter), and kept her as his agent to maintain the ruse. Twenty years and several unsuccessful novels later, he approached Tassel with the original concept for Bombyx Mori. Realising her opportunity, Tassel conspired with him to stage his disappearance (under the guise of gaining publicity), then rewrote the manuscript to condemn the industry, murdered Quine and framed Leonora for the crime. As Strike lays out the evidence, Tassel attempts to flee, but a scheme concocted by Strike and Robin causes her to be caught quickly. The original Bombyx Mori manuscript is recovered, with Fancourt acknowledging its literary value. The novel ends with Strike visiting Robin, having enrolled her in investigative training courses as a Christmas gift.

Characters

Main characters

characters

Other characters

Sales and reception

Much like The Cuckoo's Calling, The Silkworm was met with critical acclaim but, since Rowling's identity as the series' author was revealed in early 2013, managed to sell more copies than its predecessor in its opening weeks.

Val McDermid from The Guardian gave the novel a positive review, but criticised the descriptions of the different London settings, which she considered superfluous: "I suspect that having spent so many books describing a world only she knew has left her with the habit of telling us rather too much about a world most of us know well enough to imagine for ourselves".[1] The novel has also been nominated for a Gold Dagger Award at the Crime Writers’ Association Daggers 2015.[2]

References

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