The first novel for adults by Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling will be the “blackly comic” tale of a fraught parish council election in a quaint English town, her publishers announced Thursday.
The 408-page novel “The Casual Vacancy” follows the fallout of councilor Barry Fairweather’s sudden death in the fictional town of Pagford, a world away from that inhabited by the famous boy wizard, publishers Little, Brown said.
With its cobbled market square and ancient abbey, Pagford may look like an English idyll, “but what lies behind the pretty fa㧡e is a town at war”, they said in a statement.
Rowling laid down her pen — and Harry’s magic wand — when she finished the seventh and final Potter book in 2007, and since then the series has sold more than 450 million copies around the world in 74 languages.
The 46-year-old is Britain’s 15th wealthiest woman, according to The Sunday Times newspaper’s Rich List 2011, with a £530 million ($830 million, 625 million euro) fortune.
The Potter books were made into eight films, with the last, “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows — Part 2” making more than $1 billion last year.
Rowling has changed publishers for the novel, leaving behind Bloomsbury, with whom she became the world’s best-paid author.
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