Tuesday, November 13, 2012

The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde


For November, the first month of this book challenge and the fact that it is NaNoWriMo, I decided to read a few novels about literature and writing. I could not think of a better book to start with than Jasper Fforde's The Eyre Affair.
I purchased this copy at Casablanca bookshop for $4.99. I was completely unfamiliar with the author, but I had read good reviews on goodreads, and noticed a few booktubers were talking it up, so I figured I would give it a try. Classic literature, plus time travel? This should be fun.
For those unfamiliar with the story, it takes place in an alternate 1985 and it follows a literary detective named Thursday Next. For some reason when I started this book, I assumed Thursday was male. But, it turns out, she's a pretty bad-ass lady-detective.
Thursday works for a special police force that has many different levels. The literary detectives are SpecOps-27. The lower the level, the more secretive they are. So secretive in fact, that most people do not even know what goes on in SpecOps branches below level 9.
Thursday is recruited for a lower SpecOps branch when it is discovered that one of her old college professors, Acheron Hades, has stolen Dickens' Martin Chuzzlewit manuscript and is threatening to kidnap and kill Chuzzlewit, forever altering Dickens' beloved story. Hades clearly does not stop with Chuzzlewit. As the title suggests, he also interferes with Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre.  
There is also this odd element of time travel in the book. Thursday's father is constantly traveling through time and it wasn't quite clear to me whether he was choosing to do this, or whether he was trapped for some reason.
I loved how Fforde blurred the boundaries between fictional characters in classic literature and  his own "non-fictional" characters. Fforde's characters can travel into the novels, and sometimes become characters that end up in the story, as well as these characters traveling into the real, present day world.
The whole idea of having literary detectives seemed kind of neat to me, but actually reading about the detective aspects...weren't. I'm just not a big fan of detective fiction...not that I've read a lot of it. I think the quick witty literature references and things like Will-Speak machines (essentially little robots that spout-off lines of Shakespeare ) and book worms (wormy-grubbs that digest and condense stories by burping out apostrophes and "unnecessary" descriptions) made the book worth while.
Overall I gave this books three out of five stars. It was fun, I enjoyed it, but I don't think I will be compelled to re-read this book, or finish the series.

Your reader,
Deni




No comments:

Post a Comment