Something Rotten (#4) by Jasper Fforde

Published: 11 Apr 2005
Goodreads badgePublisher: Hodder and Stoughton
Pages: 393
Format: Book
Genre: Science Fiction/Fantasy
★   ★   ★   ★   ★  – 5 Stars

Literary detective Thursday next is on a mission – and it’s not just a mission to save the planet. if only it were that simple.

Unemployed following an international cheese-smuggling scandal, our favourite cultural crime-fighter is face with a world of problems: Hamlet’s not attending his conflict resolution classes, President George Formby is facing a coup led by dastardly Yorrick Kaine and, what’s more, the evil Goliath Corporation are refusing to un-eradicate Thursday’s husband, Landen.

Will she ever see Landen again? Is shopping the new religion? Can Thursday prevent Armageddon? And who will babysit her son while she does it?

Sometimes a small part of me hates Jasper Fforde for his brilliant imagination and attention to detail and sheer genius stories that I am overcome with jealousy. But the other 99% of the time I adore him. His character depth and histories and minute details that don’t always have a purpose but somehow make sense and make everything more believable are why I am addicted to these books. I mean who wouldn’t believe Mrs Tiggy Winkle was in your house, seems perfectly logical when Jasper explains it. Of course a gorilla can wear heels and babysit a toddler that only speaks Lorem Ipsum when Jasper explains it.

Something Rotten is just as wonderful as the previous books, and best of all they reference one another and if you hadn’t read them (why haven’t you? What is more important?), but if you haven’t, there are enough quick summaries and references that are silkily woven into the story so it doesn’t stand out as a major recap that stops the flow. It is just simply another humorous, insane and incredible Thursday Next book. I mean where else does Shakespeare, genetic cloning, inappropriate prophets and Chuck Norris get mentioned in one place, answer me that. And if you thought Hamlet wasn’t like Lethal Weapon and Mad Max then you were wrong.

With the previous book offering no real resolution I entered book number four already knowing what was going on, as much as you can anyway. And to some degree I was right. We meet up with Thursday who is still living within the Book World as the Jurisfiction Bellman, and with her child she manages to police the Book World, all the while trying to solve the issues she left behind in the real world.

I have to say this was definitely a high favourite of the series. It wasn’t just the narrative and the revelations and the questions, but there were so many lovable characters and surreal but very realistic moments as well. A lot of answers are given in this book, and a few new questions, I say a few, a lot more questions are asked. Somehow Jasper manages to make things more exciting, more complex, and add more pure and simple genius into every new book. By the end of this series I am not going to be able to control myself if things keep going at this rate. A lot of the previous book flows on into this one as we see more of the Book World life, however Thursday is beginning to tire of it but leaving the literary world does not guarantee the literature is going to leave her.

Many familiar faces return plus a range of new ones. I must say Emperor Zhark and Granny are my strong favourites, but you really can’t choose. The works of Shakespeare cause chaos as per usual, there are just never pleasing some princes; and shopping is fast becoming the new religion. There is professional croquet,  outbreaks of slapstick, minotaurs, cheese and Danish controversy, and the mysterious ovinator to delight the senses and enthrall the mind. I can go on but I won’t.

Somehow, and despite having more books in the series, Jasper has answered all the questions of the previous books. The genius plot of the previous book continues with the aftermath, but in doing so makes the narrative oh so much better. We are kept on the edge of our seats and we are set a flutter in our beds, and if we were to read this in public there would be audible gasps and exclamations as we turn each page. For all the work Jasper has put into this series so far, this is the book that ties it together. And in tying everything together he gives us the greatest ending anyone could possibly imagine. I know I say a lot of things in this book are amazing but this was so spectacular I had to go over it a few times to make sure.

I don’t want you to think anything of this though, Jasper can summerise the past four books all he likes, but he also adds in a whole new set of events and chaos. This is why these books work. Somehow in this organised chaos, that is really not as confusing as it sounds it just makes reviewing rather messy, there are strings that pull you along with Thursday and we get the sense of her urgency, her fear, her confusion and her own chaos. Alan is there in all his adorableness, there’s the ever mocked Daphne Farquitt, Old English, and a whole history of literary characters that are so much stranger than their words give them credit for. If you haven’t started this series yet I can do nothing else for you but hope that you can live with the intense curiosity of never really knowing what it is I am truly going on about.

The Well of Lost Plots (#3) by Jasper Fforde

Published: January 19th 2004
Goodreads badgePublisher: Hodder and Stoughton
Pages: 360
Format: Book
Genre: Science Fiction/Fantasy
★   ★   ★   ★   ★  – 5 Stars

Pursued by a sinister multinational corporation and an evil genius with a penchant for clothes shopping and memory modification, literary detective Thursday Next is on the run. Not an ideal situation considering she is pregnant by her husband who is presently suffering a non-existence problem.

Taking refuge in the Well of Lost plots – the place where all fiction is created – Thursday ponders her next move from inside an unpublished novel of dubious merit entitled Caversham Heights. But in Thursday’s world, trouble is only ever a page away, and when a succession of Jurisfiction agents are killed, only one woman is up to the job of unmasking the villain responsible.

Will Thursday ever be able to enjoy the quiet life again, or is she about the lose the plot completely.

Inside the Book World, the Well of Lost Plots is where fiction is created. Not only the ideas, but the unpublished, rejected and snippets of stories that have ever been thought of. It is wonderful place, and it is here that we find Thursday Next, hiding within an unpublished Caversham Heights. So welcome to February, and welcome to book number three in the Thursday Next series!

We left book number two with Thursday’s great idea, and this has led her back into the world of literature. Hiding within a novel does not mean a time of rest as Thursday must play her part in the novel as cover, accompanied and with the help of her partner DCI Jack Spratt. As we follow Thursday’s story we learn more about The Great Library and the ins and outs of the Book World we know, but we also get to see the workings of The Well. Inside The Well is where the unpublished books, characters and stories exist, ever hoping to one day be published. The Well has been mentioned in previous books as part of the many sub-levels but this is the first time we get to really see what it is like.

As the narrative explores Thursday’s time down in The Well, Miss Havisham returns and continues Thursday’s training to become an agent. Woven into all the other plots and drama we follow them as they venture around the world solving everyone’s dilemmas, with Miss Havisham being delightfully fun to read about as per usual. Along with Miss Havisham there are many people I adore in this book but Granny Next is definitely a strong favourite. She joins Thursday in the Book World to help her cope, and help her remember what she needs to remember. With Granny Next we are given parts to her story as well, something I find amusing because I am sure it is offending someone in the world somewhere. Personally, I think the moments with Granny Next and Thursday are the best moments to read about in the grand scheme of things, but there is so much going on and so many funny moments you can’t truly pick one. Though Humpty’s drama gets a special mention because I was so pleased with myself when I understood something it made me feel rather special.

What I think is the most enjoyable aspects are the ongoing narratives through this series.  Of course there as probably hundreds of little things that make it wonderful as well, but the underlying story that has structure and consistency makes it that much greater. Naturally there are things that are raised and solved within each book, but by having the same stories, the same issues, and the same people pop up as the books in the background throughout gives an added sense to the real world feeling. Things take time, and ongoing political and global issues are going to still be there no matter what is happening that week, month or year. So by having these issues from past books return, along with new faces, old faces, bureaucratic issues and just plain old murder (which is never as plain as it appears), Jasper is giving us everything we would ever need to create a simply beautiful and spectacular book to read that makes life that little bit more interesting.

I’ve just about given up trying to list all the books Fforde mentions, whether in passing or as a major contributor, so I won’t. Just know there is something for everyone. We also see a greater connection to Jasper’s other series The Nursery Crimes in Lost Plots too. Something that will, naturally, make you want to read them as soon as possible as well. The footnoterphone returns which is always a fun experience, there are grammasites, the mispeling vyrus, and BOOK V8.3 is getting an upgrade. There is also the glam affair of the 923rd Annual Fiction Awards, a mysterious trial, and a lot of waiting! There really is no end to the excitement. The Well of Lost Plots does progress Thursday’s story, but it also spends a lot of the time expanding our view of the Book World rather than the real one. We gain more understanding of how detailed and intricate this world really is, and just how simply reading a book can cause all sorts of emotional, physical and bureaucratical stress. You will never look at books the same way after this novel, I promise you.

Next Newer Entries