LONDON — J.K. Rowling says her crime-writing alter ego Robert Galbraith had respectable sales and two TV adaptation offers before he was exposed as a pseudonym for the "Harry Potter" novelist, and she wishes she could have kept her identity secret a little longer.
Rowling said Wednesday that "Robert was doing rather better than we had expected him to," selling 8,500 copies in print, audiobook and e-book formats of thriller "The Cuckoo's Calling," which was published in April.
Writing on Galbraith's author website, Rowling said "Robert was doing rather better than we had expected him to."
"At the point I was 'outed', Robert had sold 8,500 English-language copies across all formats ... and received two offers from television production companies," she wrote.
"The Cuckoo's Calling" was published to good reviews as the fiction debut of a former military man working in the civilian security industry. But a newspaper revealed earlier this month that Rowling had written the book under a pseudonym.
Since then it has topped best-seller lists, with publisher Little, Brown and Company printing hundreds of thousands of new copies.
There was speculation that Rowling or her publisher had leaked the news to boost sales, but last week a law firm that has done work for Rowling admitted that one if its partners had let the information slip to his wife's best friend, who tweeted it to a Sunday Times columnist.
"If anyone had seen the labyrinthine plans I laid to conceal my identity (or indeed my expression when I realized that the game was up), they would realize how little I wanted to be discovered," Rowling wrote.