cyberdad wrote:
Harry Potter in Britain is not (and never will be) "high culture", In literary circles JK Rowling is considered a "fly by night" newcomer or a one-trick pony.
What/who/where are these "literary circles"?
And
"considered a "fly by night" newcomer or a one-trick pony"? Who said that?
I think you'll find that the Harry Potter series was never intended to be anything more than a story, and AFAIK has never been presented as a contender for a new Chaucer or Shakespeare.
Quote:
You will notice all her projects outside of the HP franchise have been financially and culturally an abject failures to the point she will not be remembered for anything other than Harry.
Really? I thought Robert Galbraith was doing very well, and I read that
"The Running Grave" is an international best seller going straight in at No. 1 in the bestseller lists in the UK, US and Australia after its first week being on sale, and that all six "Strike" novels -
The Cuckoo's Calling,
The Silkworm,
Career of Evil,
Lethal White,
Troubled Blood and
The Ink Black Heart - topped the national and international bestseller lists and the series has been adapted for television, produced by Brontë Film and Television.
Doesn't sound too bad for abject financial and cultural failures.
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Giraffe: a ruminant with a view.