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
Book review: Career of Evil, Robert Galbraith
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In her third outing as Robert Galbraith, J.K. Rowling makes Voldemort look like the Dalai Lama.
This is not quite Boxing Helena (the much-slated film starring Sherilyn Fenn as a woman amputee confined to a box by psychopathic surgeon Julian Sands), but there is a fair amount of limb removal as sort of perverse retribution, with Robin - Strike's assistant - being targeted as a way to get to Strike. There is plenty to dismay the squeamish, not least the chillingly graphic passages that depict the killer's inner world. Suffice to say, he makes Voldemort look like the Dalai Lama.
Despite the use of the third person throughout, there is a clever interweaving of several perspectives, with the killer popping up (unidentified, obviously) throughout. He's not much fun to be with, living with someone he calls "It" (his abused partner, we presume) and delighting in his cunning disguises (woolly hats and coats worn inside out) and his vast collection of knives and, er, fleshy trophies.
Much of the story is told with a focus on Robin. She is keen to make her way as a private investigator and wants to impress Strike, for whom she (inadvisedly) carries a small torch. And the attraction is mutual, of course. Robin's not afraid of much - despite a major scare in her past. But she does have severe anxiety about her forthcoming wedding to weedy Matthew. Not so her stalker. He doesn't think Robin needs to worry about getting married at all because he's planning she won't make it that far.
If there was a critique of the two previous Strike novels, it's that Galbraith (yes, I will play along) privileges character over plot. This continues in the same vein but here it feels like a virtue: you care as much about Strike and Robin's relationship as you care about the crime. A lot has gone into this book.

Rowling (I'm giving up now) writes in the acknowledgments: "I can't remember ever enjoying writing a novel more than
Career Of Evil.
" For a writer like this, that is a big "ever". She has said elsewhere that this book required more planning than anything else she has written and that it gave her nightmares - "which has never happened before". It gave me the heebie-jeebies too. And as such I would only recommend it to serious crime fans: a page-turner with legs that will keep you up all night (sorry).
Career of Evil
by Robert Galbraith
(Sphere $37.99)
- Canvas, Observer