Thursday, March 15, 2007

#25 Lost in a Good Book

by Jasper Fforde

This is the second book in the Thursday Next series. I enjoyed this book as much as the first. Fforde has created an alternate 1985 that is creative and interesting. I explained some of the differences in this post, so you can refer there for more detail. In this book, Thursday has just married Landon Parklane and is the public hotshot for the special ops. Spec. ops is using her "well-known among the public" status to their advantage by putting her on talk show circuit and such. The only problem is that she can't actually tell the whole story of how she entered the book Jane Eyre, how she defeated Acheron Hades, or how she changed the ending to the book.

She begins to come across some very strange circumstances of coincidence that she doesn't believe are coincidences at all. Her uncle gives her an entropy sensor that allows her to tell when the entropy in the universe is at an unusually low level and thereby when many coincidences may be likely (like being on a train with 7 women, all with the same name). She discovers that Acheron's sister is behind the drop in entropy and is trying to use this to kill her.

Meanwhile, Goliath, the big corporation that basically runs Great Britain from behind the scenes, is trying to get her to free one of their top people from the poem The Raven. She is unwilling to help, so they eradicate her husband when he was only two years old. This leaves her husband alive only in her memory, but know one else even knows who he is. Her time traveling father tries to help her stop the eradication, but fails. Her father also tells her that the world is going to end in 3 weeks (I can't remember the exact time), but he doesn't know why.

She is also recruited into the Jurisfiction department; which is a group of fictional characters, from Ms. Havesham of Great Expectations to the Cheshire Cat of Alice in Wonderland, that enforce the law within fictional books. In this department she must learn how to jump into and out of books.

She is trying to discover the reason behind the end of the world, get her husband back, avoid being killed by Acheron's sister, and get Goliath to leave her alone all at the same time...and did I mention she's pregnant with her eradicated husband's baby? Try to figure that one out. It sounds like there's a lot going on, but Fforde writing is smooth as easy to follow...much more than mine is. There is one quote that I liked so much I wrote it down (remember that I listen to my books these days, so it's hard to keep track of quotes I like).

Thursday's father took her back to a specific moment in time to try and change some menial thing that might prevent the world from ending. A motorist was going to hit a man on a bike and kill the man. The was the only instance her father could trace back to the end of the world. They first encounter the motorist after he has hit the cyclist, and the motorist is making all kinds of excuses for how this could have happened. Thursday's father says, "Male Guilt Avoidance Syndrome. It's a medically recognized condition by the year 2054." I know it's not a profound quote, but I got a good laugh out of it.

2 Comments:

At Sunday, March 25, 2007 at 5:52:00 PM MDT, Blogger Booklogged said...

That may be the most profound quote I've ever heard! Too funny.

My sage reader must not be working right. I click on it several times each day, but just now was the first it showed a new post at your blog. So I come to check and there's 3 new posts I haven't seen! Sorry to be so late in commenting.

I love that you are reading and enjoying these books. They are so crazy and funny, but with great plots. It's great to read your reviews and relive some of the fun.

 
At Sunday, March 25, 2007 at 10:21:00 PM MDT, Blogger Framed said...

I swear I just looked at your blog and the last review was for Northanger Abbey. Are you messing with the dates here?

I tried reading this series once and couldn't get into it. It sounds good,so I might have to try again some day.

 

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