What starts as a mundane trip into town turns into a day to remember for the famous children's author.
The satirical walk with J.K. Rowling through a typical day in her life sees her morph into absurd characters during altercations with the public, become trapped in a farcical memory loop and attempt to sway politics in an uproarious conversation with the Rt. Hon Jeremy Corbyn.
Meanwhile, back at Chez Rowling, his chores complete, husband Neil has turned on his secret computer behind closed curtains, hoping to bring his covert plan to fruition...
When the day is over, what will Rowling find waiting for her when she walks through her front door? Who is the mysterious entity lurking in the shadows? And how the hell do the sprinklers turn on?
J.K. Rowling in: It's a Kind of Magic invites you to follow in Joanne's footsteps as she takes Edinburgh by storm.
If you have read One Election Please... How J.K. Rowling Bought British Politics, Hid Her Tue Self and Hoodwinked the World-an Unauthorised Biographical Exposé, you will be sure to find the comedy re-imagining of J.K Rowling in It's a Kind of Magic the perfect companion piece.
J.K. Rowling in: It's a Kind of Magic Is the first instalment in the Bruce Masters Universe series of books.
Part of the Bruce Masters Rowling Trilogy.
If you hate political corruption, lies, billionaires buying political influence and elites controlling the fate of the majority, and if you value old concepts such as honesty, truth and fair play, you will love this book-and its two companion books, which together comprise Bruce Masters' Rowling Trilogy.
The Rowling Trilogy (from 2019) was Dr Masters' way of registering a very loud and general complaint about big money in politics and the modern litigation culture, which he considers divisive, uncivilised, elitist, supremacistic and dishonourable.
The trilogy of books began when Masters observed fellow Brit J.K. Rowling on several occasions writing £1M cheques for political parties and political causes that interested her, as well as using her name and her celebrity in an attempt to influence the outcome of elections and referendums, or at least that is how Masters interpreted her various political actions.
The trilogy begins with J.K. Rowling In: It's a Kind of Magic, a fun and comedic work of political satire in which Rowling is the star of the show, joined by her husband as well as Jeremy Corbyn MP, personal assistants and Subway sandwich workers....
The second instalment is How Not to Get Sued by J.K. Rowling, the diary chronicling Dr Masters' attempts at publishing books relating to the billionaire author without being sued back into the Stone Age.
It makes for compelling reading as the communication between the two authors over a prolonged period of time is surprising, revealing and oftentimes shocking.
The trilogy concludes with One Election Please... How J.K. Rowling Bought British Politics, Hid Her True Self and Hoodwinked the World, an Unauthorised Biographical Exposé, possibly the longest book title in the world and perhaps the most interesting and unique biography also.
The trilogy combined is a humorous, deeply investigative (400 citations and references), revealing and fast-paced reading experience whether you love or loathe Rowling, or even if you currently have no opinion of her as a person or political influencer whatsoever.