jasperfforde.com advert banner jasperfforde.com advert banner jasperfforde.com advert banner jasperfforde.com advert banner Toad News Banner
Press button to launch Boss Coming Emergency procedure Press button to launch Boss Coming Emergency procedure Press button to launch Boss Coming Emergency procedure

Home  -   What's New  -   Events  -   Index  -   FAQ  -   Buy Books  -   Ffiesta  -   Goliath  -   NCD  -   More
Journalist's Resource  -   Contact  -   Special Features  -   Next Book  -   Bookshelf  -   SpecOps  -   Swindon
Movies  -   Ffotographica  -   Reader's Contributions  -   Jurisfiction  -   Giveaways  -   Mum  -   Downloads
Merchandise  -   Competitions  -   Book Upgrades  -   Fforum  -   Questions  -   Twitter  -   Nextreme!
Thursday Next Series -  Big Over Easy -  4th Bear -  Dragonslayer Series -  Shades of Grey  

 
Bookpage
July 2005
The Big Over Easy
Review by JOANNE COLLINGS

The Big Over Easy, by Jasper Fforde

Nursery-rhyme crime time




After four books in the Thursday Next series, Jasper Fforde has turned his unique imagination to the inspired joining of familiar nursery rhymes and modern detective novels. Those who remember the first and are familiar with the second will derive the most entertainment from The Big Over Easy. A working knowledge of popular British culture won't hurt either, but the jokes and puns are so varied and numerous that anyone with a good sense of humor is bound to enjoy the chase. If you miss one joke, there's another one coming in the next sentence, or maybe even later in the same one.

Detective Inspector Jack Spratt, fresh from the failure of the prosecution to get a conviction on the three pigs in the wolf's death, and his newly assigned assistant Mary Mary-who has passed the Official Sidekick test and was hoping for something better than working in the under-budgeted and much maligned Nursery Crimes Division (NCD)-are investigating the death of one Humperdinck Jehoshaphat Aloyius Stuyvesant van Dumpty, aka Humpty Dumpty. Jack, happily married to his second wife after his first wife died-from eating only fat, of course-with a blended family and "the laziest cat that had ever lived, ever," is an admirable character, devoted to his unit, and nowhere near as bitter as he could be over the antics of former partner Friedland Chymes, who took all the credit for cases Jack solved.

One of Fforde's best running jokes is the names of the detectives who belong to the Guild of Detectives and whose exploits are recounted in the popular "Amazing Crime Stories." They include Inspector Moose of Cambridge and Inspector Rhombus from Edinburgh. It took me a lot longer to get Friedland Chymes, despite being a fan of Jeffery Deaver, but I was thrilled when I did, and discoveries like that are part of the joy of reading Fforde's latest creation.

By Joanne Collings      To see the Bookpage website click HERE

To go back to Review list - click
HERE