
JK Rowling compares Nicola Sturgeon to Twilight's Bella Swan
The Harry Potter author is a long-time critic of the former SNP leader and her views on gender self-ID.
The near-3000-word review, published on her website, accuses Ms Sturgeon, who passed gender reform legislation at Holyrood, of holding 'luxury beliefs' that have caused 'real, lasting harm' to women.
The Twilight of Nicola Sturgeon
My review of Franklyhttps://t.co/p158nlJnpW pic.twitter.com/8pXc5IakUm — J.K. Rowling (@jk_rowling) August 14, 2025
Rowling published her review on X alongside what appears to be an AI-generated image of Ms Sturgeon in the woods in front of a wolf and a vampire.
She said of the politician's memoir, Frankly: 'She remains stubbornly wedded to her belief that it is possible to let some men into women's spaces on the men's say so, without letting any man who fancies it come inside.
'She denies there are any risks to a policy of gender self-identification.
'She can't imagine any male predator capitalising on such policies, in spite of the fact that it has, demonstrably, happened many times.
'She is flat-out Trumpian in her shameless denial of reality and facts"
Rowling, who lives in Edinburgh, said the Glasgow Southside MSP had not been 'remotely humbled' by the Supreme Court ruling that sex in the UK Equality Act referred to biological sex.
The Gender Recognition Reform (Scotland) Act, which was passed by MSPs, was ultimately scrapped by Westminster, with the then Tory government saying it contravened equalities law.
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In her book, Ms Sturgeon said she had never received as much abuse as when Rowling posted a picture of herself on social media with a T-shirt saying 'Nicola Sturgeon, destroyer of women's rights'.
The former first minister said the post made her feel 'more at risk of possible physical harm'.
Rowling defended the decision, writing in her review that she intended to encourage journalists to question Ms Sturgeon on the impacts her gender reforms may have.
She compares the MSP to Twilight character Bella Swan, saying both were 'monomaniacs', with Mr Sturgeon being 'consumed' by independence.
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