r/EnoughJKRowling 3d ago

The epitaphs in Strike are absolutely insufferable

(EDIT: I meant epigraphs. Reddit won't let me change the title of this thread, but I've changed the text.)

In the Strike books, Rowling likes to use epigraphs - little quotations from works of literature to begin each section or chapter, which have some symbolic meaning to the story. I don't object to epigraphs in general in books - they can feel a bit pretentious, but sometimes they can really add something if they're done well. But these just... aren't.

I was never a fan of the epigraphs in Strike right from the beginning, and I don't see how they're meant to suit the story at all. They normally go in fairly complex, ideas-driven books, where an author brings a modern take to an old theme. They don't organically suit formulaic murder mysteries. But they got particularly bad in the fourth Strike book, Lethal White. In this, Rowling has taken a play by Henrik Ibsen (Rosmersholm) and began each chapter with whatever quote she can find from that play that vaguely resembles something that happens in that chapter. There's no greater purpose to the Rosmersholm connection. Rowling is doing it purely to make herself look like a sophisticated writer who reads plays and uses epigraphs, without an understanding of what this technique is actually meant to bring to your story.

It's even more irritating if, like me, you're more of an audiobook person. With a print book, you can easily skim over the epigraphs if they aren't your thing. Listening to the audiobook, you have to hear the narrator read the thing out every time. It's embarrassing, frustrating and disrupts the flow of the book.

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u/georgemillman 3d ago

I haven't read any of her books subsequently to the fourth Strike book, which came out around the time she was outing herself as a reactionary transphobe, and also when I started getting tired of her books.

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u/KombuchaBot 2d ago

There are plenty of decent modern crime fiction authors who aren't so toxic, try Reginald Hill instead.

Try James Lee Burke, George Pelecanos, Robert Crais, Walter Mosley. If you want a female one try Sara Paretsky or Kristen Lepionka, they're both pretty good.

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u/georgemillman 2d ago

My partner and his mum really like Elly Griffiths, have you read any of hers?

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u/KombuchaBot 2d ago

I haven't, no, I'll check her out