We know from her
recent deliberate libelling by the legendarily foul mouthed Paul Dacre and
his obedient hackery at the Daily Mail
that the larger part of the Fourth Estate has declared open season on author
and campaigner Jo Rowling, mainly because she testified at the Leveson Inquiry,
and passed severely adverse comment on the behaviour of those who scrabble
around the dunghill that is Grubstreet.
Same author, same attack, different book
So it is no surprise at all to see the opening salvo being
fired in the assault on her latest novel, The
Silkworm, written under the alias of Robert Galbraith. As with its
predecessor The Casual Vacancy, the
bombardment will be incessant: Ms Rowling has stood in opposition to bad press
behaviour, and as any fule kno this causes grave offence to our free and
fearless press (cue hollow laughter).
That opening shot has
come from the bear pit that is Telegraph
blogs, and its author is Daniel Jackson: “J K Rowling's next novel The Silkworm has a clunking Lefty agenda. You
have been warned” he tells, reading from the approved list of talking
points. Yes, as with characterisation of teachers and actors as Rotten Lefties,
so it is with Ms Rowling, because, well, it just is, so there.
“Media luvvies are
very upset about press intrusion ... Technology has put them in the
line of fire, and they don’t like it” he tells. So it’s about technology?
Er, no, he just put that in to pad it out. But do carry on. “J K Rowling joined their ranks long ago. She
told the Leveson inquiry that she felt threatened by journalists hanging around
outside her house ... [but] You can’t
see her house from the street”.
Shocking, eh? Caught attempting to limit intrusion with
malice aforethought, and objecting to bad behaviour with intent. Nope, neither
is a crime. Why the sour attitude, Daniel? “In
her forthcoming novel ... Rowling is training her sights on the newspapers ... This
is interesting because, despite her grievances, some journalists have spent the
best part of two decades singing her praises at every opportunity”.
To which I call bullshit: as the Mail’s recent legal cave-in demonstrates, since Leveson it’s been
all-out attack. Jackson does not dwell on such niceties: “You have to be a genius (George Orwell, say) to pull off an agenda
novel. Rowling is not. Her political worldview isn’t even interesting. It's
superficially cosy and caring but underneath it's not far removed from Owen
Jones agitprop – naive and damaging”.
And once again he quotes from the approved talking points.
But there is one small problem for this budding critic: “Although I haven’t read her new
novel (it's under embargo) I think it is fair not to expect very much from
it”. Ah, behind the missing comma, we find that Jackson is just slagging
off Jo Rowling’s new book in order to ingratiate himself with his press pals
and thus garner some brownie points.
Just think how nasty
the reviews will be when they bother to read it, eh?
"That opening shot has come from the bear pit that is Telegraph blogs, and its author is Daniel Jackson: “J K Rowling's next novel The Silkworm has a clunking Lefty agenda. You have been warned”
ReplyDeleteDaniel Jackson is a Daily Telegraph blogger and has, like his parent paper, a clunking right wing agenda. You should have been warned by now.
Press people are upset about others wishing to ensure a balanced and fair press and like technology, such as the internet, are livid with those who testified at Leveson and support the HackedOff campaign.
In their current news reporting (hah) the press are setting their sights on those who object to their own current self regulation proposals i.e. business as usual.
You don't have to be a genius to run a national newspaper just pots of money, and axe to grind, and a lot of dinosaur reporters waiting around for extinction.
To be fair I don't read the Daily Telegraph,have not heard of Daniel Jackson, and therefore my words are not to be taken seriously - why I was asked to do them God only knows. Fills up the space I presume.
Fair alternative precis of quoted remarks (with a few adjustments)?
Nice, but I think you skipped the first "Robert Galbraith" novel. Can't remember the name off the top of my head.
ReplyDeleteGlad the agenda at that "Bastion of the free press", The Daily Telegraph has been highlighted, again. bit.ly/ukteaparty3
ReplyDelete