|
What we're reading today |
Christine: The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde
From Publishers Weekly:
Surreal and hilariously funny, this alternate history, the debut novel of
British author Fforde, will appeal to lovers of zany genre work (think Douglas
Adams) and lovers of classic literature alike. The scene: Great Britain circa
1985, but a Great Britain where literature has a prominent place in everyday
life. For pennies, corner Will-Speak machines will quote Shakespeare; Richard
III is performed with audience participation … la Rocky Horror and children swap
Henry Fielding bubble-gum cards. In this world where high lit matters, Special
Operative Thursday Next (literary detective) seeks to retrieve the stolen
manuscript of Dickens's Martin Chuzzlewit. The evil Acheron Hades has plans for
it: after kidnapping Next's mad-scientist uncle, Mycroft, and commandeering
Mycroft's invention, the Prose Portal, which enables people to cross into a
literary text, he sends a minion into Chuzzlewit to seize and kill a minor
character, thus forever changing the novel. Worse is to come. When the
manuscript of Jane Eyre, Next's favorite novel, disappears, and Jane herself is
spirited out of the book, Next must pursue Hades inside Charlotte Bronte's
masterpiece. The plethora of oddly named characters can be confusing, and the
story's episodic nature means that the action moves forward in fits and starts.
The cartoonish characters are either all good or all bad, but the villain's
comeuppance is still satisfying. Witty and clever, this literate romp heralds a
fun new series set in a wonderfully original world.
Marisa: She's not reading, she's watching TV - it's the fall season. Go Heroes! Go Prison Break! Go Battlestar Galactica! I lament the hiatus.
| Home | What we write... | Interests | What we're reading | Quote of the day | Research links | Miscellaneous this and that |