The Eyre Affair (#1) by Jasper Fforde

Published: July 19th 2001
Goodreads badgePublisher: Hodder and Stoughton
Pages: 373
Format: Book
Genre: Science Fiction/Fantasy
★   ★   ★   ★   ★  – 5 Stars

There is another 1985, where London’s criminal gangs have moved into the lucrative literary market, and Thursday Next is on the trail of the new crime wave’s Mr Big. Acheron Hades has been kidnapping characters from works of fiction and holding them to ransom. Jane Eyre is gone. Missing. 

Thursday sets out to find a way into the book to repair the damage. But solving crimes against literature isn’t easy when you also have to find time to halt the Crimean War, persuade the man you love to marry you, and figure out who really wrote Shakespeare’s plays.

Perhaps today just isn’t going to be Thursday’s day. Join her on a truly breathtaking adventure, and find out for yourself. Fiction will never be the same again…

This has got to be one of the funnest, funniest and greatest books I have read. It is set in an alternative 1985 and literally explores novels and literature in a way I just cannot believe. Jasper Fforde has the ability to delve into the literary world with accuracy and consideration for every possible outcome and explanation. The story follows Thursday Next as she works on solving literary issues that arise in this surreal world of hers, and in her role as
a literary detective she is part of the team that keeps novels on track and when they are interrupted or, as it were, stolen.

In this first adventure Jane Eyre is under threat and Thursday is trying to keep the story uninterrupted while chasing an old enemy through its pages. What was brilliant about this book is that even though I have read Jane Eyre, I spent so much time a little bit confused and trying to trust my own memories while I was being told something different. The fact that Fforde treats these literary characters as real people, very much like actors in a play, it is astounding and fascinating.

But despite the hype, Jane Eyre is not the only aspect of this novel and Fforde uses it to introduce us to this alternative world. There is a lot that is similar to the regular 1985 but there are certainly variations such as cloning, and the dodos, and the time travel being the big ones. It is not even as if the future has arrived early, there is just this ‘what if’ element that makes it a little science fictiony about ‘well what if the Crimean War was entering its one hundred and thirty-first year’, and ‘what if there was this agency that made sure all the literary characters behaved themselves and stopped Hamlet from chucking tantrums’. You know, little things like that.

When I read books of these nature a small but demanding part of me wishes that these things could really happen. There are enough quotes floating about from decades past and present that speak about how characters come alive in the reading but what this is, this was brilliant, I don’t know how many more ways I could say it. The quotes that can come out of this book alone are funny and clever and manage to suit all sorts of situations. Also, and I think this is terribly unfair of Fforde, is that with all these mentions of Shakespeare and oh, Great Expectations, you spend most of the time reading about Thursday and the other part thinking ‘oh I really want to read Great Expectations now’. So I offer one hearty angry fist shake at Mr Fforde for adding more books to my growing pile, and with the other shake his hand for showing me that stories can be whatever it is you want them to be and just let your mind write whatever bizarre things it thinks of- within reason of course…this is how bad literature is written. So if the idea of exploring classic and wonderful novels from absolutely new and exciting angles doesn’t get you in, then time travel, dodos, funny character names and the idea of being stuck in a Wordsworth poem should be enough to entice anybody to at least have a look. From the first few chapters I knew I would adore this series and certainly by the end of the book I wished upon all my wishes that we too could own Dodos.

The Tale of Despereaux by Katie DiCamillo

Published: September 9th 2008
Goodreads badgePublisher: Candlewick Press
Pages: 272
Format: Book
Genre: Junior Fiction
★   ★   ★   ★   ★ – 5 stars

Welcome to the story of Despereaux Tilling, a mouse who is in love with music, stories, and a princess named Pea. It is also the story of a rat called Roscuro, who lives in the darkness and covets a world filled with light. And it is the story of Miggery Sow, a slow-witted serving girl who harbors a simple, impossible wish. These three characters are about to embark on a journey that will lead them down into a horrible dungeon, up into a glittering castle, and, ultimately, into each other’s lives. What happens then? As Kate DiCamillo would say: Reader, it is your destiny to find out. 

I was not expecting this story. I knew the name but I didn’t know why, and I had read another of DiCamillo’s books (Because of Winn-Dixie) so I gave her a go. This is the story of a very little mouse called Desperaux, as well as a rat born into darkness and a girl with a simple, impossible wish. These three along with a castle of characters is the start of a heartfelt but sometimes saddening tale.

The beginning sets you up in a very odd way around Desperaux and his family, and introduces us to the mouse world in an old castle. But then just as you get settled DiCamillo changes our focus elsewhere and we see the start of another story. This continues through the story and it is really clever. It shows the different lives of everyone involved and how one small action can cause such a big reaction.

There are simple realities and small brutalities but nothing over the top, unless you think too much about it. But DiCamillo doesn’t make you pity any one too much. She offers small things that balance out the bad and takes a characters own pity away so you lessen your own, and what these characters offer, especially those in the wrong, provide small glimmers of forgiveness.

This is a great read, it shows how understanding can be a powerful force but also how desperation can create terrible consequences.

I am borrowing this image from Grammarly.com because I think this needs to become a constant in a lot of reviews.

 

The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick

Published: April 1st 2007
Goodreads badgePublisher: Scholastic
Pages: 525
Format: Book
Genre: Junior Fiction
★   ★   ★   ★   ★ – 5 stars

Half sketches create a story in pictures too, relevant history. Real last-century French pioneer filmmaker Georges Méliès collected mechanical robot-like automata, and, impoverished, worked at a toy booth in a Paris railway station. Here, orphan Hugo fixes his late father’s automata, and meets Méliès through his god-daughter Isabelle.

There are not enough ways and words I can use to tell you all how much I adored this book. It is absolutely spectacular. Do not let the 525 pages frighten you off. It is a fairly quick read, the writing takes up little space on the page and a lot of the story is told in stunning black and white sketches.

This is the story of Hugo Cabret, a young boy living in the walls of a train station who discovers a secret. I will not ruin anything else and I will hint at nothing. This book is touching and heart warming, it is I’m assuming fiction wrapped in an element of reality because a lot of what is mentioned is very true, but the surrounding story is not.

Selznick’s characters are wonderful, even when they appear not to be. They play their parts very well and they are as real and believable as any living person. The actions of this young boy, the adults in the station, everyone who we see in this book you understand completely even before you realise why you do. Children are children and adults try their best at being adults. Secrets and hidden information do not make these characters less real. As soon as Selznick introduces a character you somehow manage to see their entire selves in the small space they are given. Anything else revealed after that only adds more and makes the story even greater and more moving.

What this story does is it draws you into this world, you see everything so clearly even without the help of the pictures. The part truth it tells makes it sorrowful at times but remarkable and fascinating at the same time. Anything based on true stories always makes me that much more involved emotionally because the events were real and did manage to change or impact someone’s life, but even these truths mixed with fiction is enough to get caught up and teary eyed at what Selznick is trying to portray.

Yes I know there was a movie, but read this book, if not first then read it after. They are so close so you won’t have to choose which one was better but this book offers just as much as the movie does if not more. There are pictures, there is writing, there are sketches and photographs, it is everything. What Selznick does is he uses these pictures to tell the story. As I say, don’t be scared of the 525 pages. There are one hundred and fifty eight different pictures and twenty six thousand and fifty nine words and every single one tells this story. Don’t ask me how I know, read the book and you’ll find out.

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