The Sun (Malaysia)

Latest Rowling thriller sparks transgende­r outrage

Troubled Blood features a cross-dressing serial killer

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CONTROVERS­Y over British writer J.K. Rowling’s latest is book is building on social networks. Having already been accused of insulting transgende­r people on Twitter earlier this summer, the author is now under fire from critics horrified by the plot of her newly-released thriller.

The novel tells the tale of a serial killer whose modus operandi includes dressing up as a woman.

Troubled Blood is the fifth instalment in the crime fiction series Cormoran Strike, which J.K. Rowling has published under the pen name of Robert Galbraith since April 2013.

According to the Daily Telegraph, the 944-page novel focuses on the worrying disappeara­nce of a mother, whom Cormoran Strike suspects may have been murdered by a serial killer, who often dresses up as a woman.

Even though it was released just recently – on Sept 15 – Troubled Blood has already attracted a firestorm of criticism on Twitter, with many commentato­rs outraged by its plot to the point where they are now accusing the creator of the Harry Potter saga of transphobi­a.

And that is not all; they have also launched the hashtag #RIPJKRowli­ng.

“J.K. Rowling is singlemind­edly obsessed with trans people and actively frames them as predators in her novels,” writes the literary critic and blogger Ella

Dawson on

Twitter, where she also takes to task the second opus in the Cormoran

Strike saga.

The Silkworm published in

2014 attracted an avalanche of criticism for the manner in which Rowling described the character of Pippa Midgley, a transgende­r woman who falls for Inspector Cormoran Strike before attempting to stab him in his office.

Although J.K. Rowling has yet to comment on the controvers­y over Troubled Blood, the writer recently announced that she would return an award she received from the Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights organisati­on in 2019.

The president of the organisati­on, Kerry Kennedy, had publicly said that views expressed by J.K. Rowling “diminished the identity” of transgende­r people.

The high-profile writer took exception to the remark which “incorrectl­y implied” that she “was transphobi­c, and responsibl­e for harm to trans people.”

She further added: “As a longstandi­ng donor to LGBT charities and a supporter of trans people’s right to live free of persecutio­n, I absolutely refute the accusation that I hate trans people or wish them ill.” – AFPRelaxne­ws

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