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Thursday Next #4

Something Rotten

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Detective Thursday Next has had her fill of her responsibilities as the Bellman in Jurisfiction. Packing up her son, Friday, Thursday returns to Swindon accompanied by none other than the dithering Danish prince Hamlet. But returning to SpecOps is no snap—as outlaw fictioneer Yorrick Kaine plots for absolute power, the return of Swindon's patron saint foretells doom, and if that isn't bad enough, back in the Book World The Merry Wives of Windsor is becoming entangled with Hamlet. Can Thursday find a Shakespeare clone to stop this hostile takeover? Can she vanquish Kaine and prevent the world from plunging into war? And, most important, will she ever find reliable childcare? Find out in this totally original, action-packed romp, sure to be another escapist thrill for Jasper Fforde's legion of fans.

385 pages, Paperback

First published July 31, 2004

375 people are currently reading
10.1k people want to read

About the author

Jasper Fforde

62books12.8kfollowers
Fforde began his career in the film industry, and for nineteen years held a variety of posts on such movies as Goldeneye, The Mask of Zorro and Entrapment. Secretly harbouring a desire to tell his own stories rather than help other people tell their's, Jasper started writing in 1988, and spent eleven years secretly writing novel after novel as he strove to find a style of his own that was a no-mans-land somewhere between the warring factions of Literary and Absurd.

After receiving 76 rejection letters from publishers, Jasper's first novel The Eyre Affair was taken on by Hodder & Stoughton and published in July 2001. Set in 1985 in a world that is similar to our own, but with a few crucial - and bizarre - differences (Wales is a socialist republic, the Crimean War is still ongoing and the most popular pets are home-cloned dodos), The Eyre Affair introduces literary detective named 'Thursday Next'. Thursday's job includes spotting forgeries of Shakespeare's lost plays, mending holes in narrative plot lines, and rescuing characters who have been kidnapped from literary masterpieces.

Luckily for Jasper, the novel garnered dozens of effusive reviews, and received high praise from the press, from booksellers and readers throughout the UK. In the US The Eyre Affair was also an instant hit, entering the New York Times Bestseller List in its first week of publication.

Since then, Jasper has added another six to the Thursday Next series and has also begun a second series that he calls 'Nursery Crime', featuring Jack Spratt of The Nursery Crime Division. In the first book, 'The Big Over Easy', Humpty Dumpty is the victim in a whodunnit, and in the second, 'The Fourth Bear', the Three Bear's connection to Goldilocks disappearance can finally be revealed.

In January 2010 Fforde published 'Shades of Grey', in which a fragmented society struggle to survive in a colour-obsessed post-apocalyptic landscape.

His latest series is for Young Adults and include 'The Last Dragonslayer' (2010), 'Song of the Quarkbeast' (2011) and 'The Eye of Zoltar' (2013). All the books centre around Jennifer Strange, who manages a company of magicians named 'Kazam', and her attempts to keep the noble arts from the clutches of big business and property tycoons.

Jasper's 14th Book, 'Early Riser', a thriller set in a world in which humans have always hibernated, is due out in the UK in August 2018, and in the US in 2019.

Fforde failed his Welsh Nationality Test by erroneously identifying Gavin Henson as a TV chef, but continues to live and work in his adopted nation despite this setback. He has a Welsh wife, two welsh daughters and a welsh dog, who is mad but not because he's Welsh. He has a passion for movies, photographs, and aviation. (Jasper, not the dog)

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,707 reviews
Profile Image for Mario the lone bookwolf.
805 reviews5,301 followers
July 19, 2020
So here come some of the main ingredients of this part of the series of inimitable inter genre reading cocktails:

Propaganda, manipulation, and warmongering in politics and trade: the satirizing of all the conspiracy theories and real-life events in this regard play a key role in the series, as it´s often the evil corporation that is playing with the next attempt of real-world domination, literary world submission, or just mega sales of a new product, not caring about the potential causality, time loop, stability of the whole book universe, consequences. Some of the funniest and most profound scenes and plot twists are created by using real-life inspired happenings.

Hamlet has hardly ever gotten so many laughs instead of sighs, tears, and suffering. So it took four parts until we reached the soliloquizing skull wielder and I guess friends of Shakespeare (will hardly ever read it) may find much more pleasure than the average reader for whom there are wit, entertaining literary history, and some alternative plot use options for the old fellow.

What happens if real, living genres merge or are forced to interbreed and get monstrous, dysfunctional, mad kids? This, one of Ffjordes´most ingenious ideas, has become one of my favorite creativity technique vehicle and, once again, I ask myself why nobody else before had this idea before Fforde. Parody and satire used the idea of mixing not fitting and opposed ideas together for millennia, I don´t know if there might not be even the one or other cave painting, but Ffjorde nailed it and pimped it to perfection. Try it, take 2 or 3 genres with 2 very different authors and bam, that´s brainstorming and creative writing ammunition for a long time.

Literary detective rules and conventions of genres. Kind of relates to the last point and is one of the driving forces of the series, as Thursday is a mixture of different thriller genre tropes. But imagine it with another setting, this has a Pratchettian potential for more satire in close to every genre (except tragedy probably), or, my dream, to use the giant of satire again, Pratchett in space with sci-fi elements.



Tropes show how literature is conceptualized and created and which mixture of elements makes works and genres unique:

October 4, 2021
And the moral of this rereread is: this series is a book lover's wet dream. And that, my Little Barnacles, is a scientifically proven fact (just ask Uncle Mycroft).

And the other moral of this rereread is: Hamlet Cousin Eddie + one-sided conversations + Hamlet alpha dodos + Herr Otto Bismarck + outbreaks of unconstrained and wholly inapproprapiate Slapstick + officially sanctioned stalkers + Admiral Nelson slightly suicidal navy officers + Teutonic slap and tickle (you don't want to know) + illegally owned bootleg cheese + Lady Emma Hamilton bankrupt lushes + trained apologists + homicidal maniacs intent on galactic domination Emperor Zhark + chronuption + female gorillas unusually hairy women + croquet-playing Neanderthals =



👋 To be continued and stuff

· Book 1: The Eyre Affair ★★★★�
· Book 2: Lost in a Good Book ★★★★�
· Book 3: The Well of Lost Plots ★★★★�
· Book 5: First Among Sequels ★★★★
· Book 6: One of Our Thursdays is Missing ★★�
· Book 7: The Woman Who Died a Lot ★★★★
· Book 8: Dark Reading Matter - to be published



[July 2013]

I'm rereading the whole Thursday Next series and I'm having such a great time! I think I'm actually enjoying the books even more the second time around:) Something Rotten is probably one of my favorite installment in the series and I just love having Hamlet in the real world, along with Lady Hamilton, an extra dodo, St Zvlkx... This is just brilliant, brilliant, brilliant!



[October 2005]

The best book in the Thursday Next series & a hilarious must-read! I really hope Jasper Fforde will write a follow-up to Thursday Next's adventures:) Not to be missed: the conversation between Hamlet & Lady Hamilton, complete with Old English and Courier Bold, it's hilarious!
Profile Image for Lynx.
198 reviews104 followers
September 3, 2017
Jasper Fforde has easily made his way into my favourite authors list. He is smart, witty, inventive, and packs his Thursday Next series full of literary references. He's basically a book lovers dream. The only terrible thing about reading one of his books is knowing it has to end. This one was definitely one of my favourites. Fforde seems to have had a vision of the future because I could swear he based his villain character Yorrick Kaine on Trump. Thursday is, as usual, a magnificent heroine and I cannot wait to find out what adventure they will take us on next!
Profile Image for Martine.
145 reviews756 followers
January 14, 2008
The fouth instalment of the Thursday Next series is my favourite one, the one in which all the plotlines set out earlier are woven together and political satire enters the series in a grand way.

In Something Rotten, Thursday returns from the book world to late-1980s England with her two-year-old son, two dodos and the Prince of Denmark, Hamlet, who wishes to see a bit of the world. As it happens, Hamlet's arrival in the real world poses a bit of a problem, for unbeknownst to Thursday, a fictional character, Yorrick Kaine, has been trying to get himself elected dictator of the British Isles, and he has just launched a vitriolic campaign against all things Danish, including Kierkegaard and Out of Africa. Just as worryingly, the almighty Goliath Corporation is trying to pass itself off as a religion rather than Big Brother, which, if everything goes according to plan, will change life in Britain significantly, and not for the better. Needless to say, Thursday has to sort things out, which she does while trying to evade an assassin, visiting the world of the dead and making sure that the local croquet team wins the cup, as the thirteenth-century saint St Zvlkx, who is always right, has predicted that the fate of the world depends on this match. Naturally, she also spends a bit of time trying to get back her husband, who still has an existence problem, but first she has to arrange a baby-sitter for her son, which proves just as difficult.

Something Rotten gets off to a slow start, but once it gets under way (some 100 pages into the book), it's excellent; the second of half of the book may well be the best part of the series so far. The political satire is thick and hilarious, the cameos and conspiracy theories are great fun, the loose ends are tied up very nicely, and in the end, nearly everyone gets what he/she deserves. What more could a reader want?
Profile Image for R.S. Carter.
Author3 books78 followers
August 8, 2013
Have you started the Thursday Next series yet? If not, put the first book on your short list. This is one of my favorite series and Something Rotten is easily the best book in the series thus far.

How can a book this hilarious make me weep like a heartbroken teenager at the end? I laughed, I cried - I was nearly institutionalized because of the Fforde-induced bipolar syndrome this book caused.

It wasn't just me. Hamlet (various classic fiction characters make grand entrances in all of these books) was also a wreck. But at the very least, his emotional highs were from knowing that he was once played by Mel Gibson. That IS, at least, something.



My review probably doesn't make sense. But I'm not trying to be serious. If you've read these books, which also make no sense and no determinable effort at being serious, you'll actually understand this garbled nonsense.
Profile Image for Jenny.
1,151 reviews100 followers
July 4, 2019
I really enjoyed this installment in the Thursday Next series! It moved more quickly than The Well of Lost Plots, and there was some suspense. Overall, it’s the characters and the quirkiness that keep me invested in this series. I love Fforde’s writing style, his humor, and the literary allusions. I love that the series is postmodern surrealist science fiction. There’s time travel, strange technology, and visits to the underworld. Mythological characters feature as much as the characters of the literary canon. I like Fforde best when he mixes the Outland with the Book World. The clash of cultures is especially interesting to me, and it’s unique to have the characters travel back and forth whereas Thursday living fully in the Book World had less variety and felt more static.

Overall, I liked this book a lot and think it continues Thursday’s story well. I was very relieved that . It was great to see some villains get their comeuppance. Of course, there are parts I thought were a little boring or that were resolved too quickly, but the book is action packed and interesting throughout most of it.

I definitely recommend this installment if you already like the series. If you haven’t read the first three books, you might be a little confused, but again, Fforde does a great job of explaining relevant key events, and if he doesn’t go into detail, it’s because the events aren’t as important to the plot. There’s also one major twist that I never saw coming that I thought was really clever.

Again, I don’t know how far I’ll get in this series. I’ve given up on Alan Bradley’s Flavia de Luce series, which became too repetitive and trite for me, but I am still enjoying this series and will definitely read Book #5!
Profile Image for melydia.
1,128 reviews19 followers
March 25, 2014
With every book I've read in this series, I've said the same thing: this was fun but I doubt I'll continue on with the series. Well, this is the fourth book and I give up. I'm going to keep reading Thursday Next books because they're absolutely ridiculous and they make me laugh. This time around, Thursday is back in the real world, where she has to deal with fictional would-be dictators, semi-dead presidents, a husband who may not actually exist, violent cricket matches, 13th century mystics, a perpetually dithering Hamlet, and - most daunting of all - motherhood. The whole thing is just marvelous. My favorite part was "Avoid the Question Time," which is pretty much what all political interviews and debates actually are but won't admit it. Nothing is too outlandish to show up in these stories, and I can't wait for the next book.
Profile Image for Kaya Kobold.
292 reviews5 followers
March 16, 2020
"Schon beim Tod meines Vaters vor vielen Jahren hatte ich erfahren, dass das Sterben und das Lebensende nicht unbedingt dasselbe waren, und das tröstete mich ganz erheblich."
Profile Image for Gintautas Ivanickas.
Author24 books272 followers
April 9, 2024
Thursday Next savo prieglobstyje knygų pasaulyje susilaukė sūnaus (nustebsit, aišku, bet pavadino jį Friday), paaugino jį porą metų ir suprato, kad metas grįžti į realų pasaulį. Grįžti ir galų gale užsiimti tuo, kuo seniai reikėjo � susigrąžinti savo „ištrintą� vyrą. Bet tai viena problema � ne problema. Tuo pat metu jai teks su autsaiderių komanda laimėti kroketo čempionatą, išgyventi medžiojamai samdomo žudiko, kurio sąskaitoje jau 67 (arba 68 � čia yra neaiškumų) žmogžudystės, į socialistinę Velso respubliką kontrabanda išgabenti kelis sunkvežimius danų rašytojų knygų (senas priešas, Kaine, siekia tapti diktatoriumi ir kursto antidaniškas nuotaikas), o taip pat kurį laiką pagloboti problemų turintį Hamletą (kuris, maža to, kad netikras, kas būtų pusė bėdos, bet dar ir danas...). Maža to, su „Hamleto� originalu knygų pasaulyje dedasi negerumai, nuo kurių išgelbėti galėtų tik pats Shakespeare‘as. Belieka smulkmena � surasti didžiojo dramaturgo kloną...
Kaip supratot, pripinta daug. Bet viskas ir išsipina, iššauna aibė ankstesnėse knygose ant sienų sukabintų šautuvų. Ir galiausiai uždaromos visos arkos. Realiai � labai gera vieta pabaigti serijos skaitymą.
Bet kad jau buvau pasiruošęs, tai dar vieną paimsiu. O šitai � keturi iš penkių. Ne taip gerai, kaip pati pirmoji serijos knyga, bet geriau už antrą ir trečią. Gal todėl, kad uždarė tas ore pakabintas arkas. Greičiausiai.
Profile Image for Ms. Smartarse.
682 reviews344 followers
February 12, 2015
I regarded reading the 4th book in the series more like a duty, rather than something interesting to pass time with. I didn't really want to read it now, but since I got through the first 3 I might as well read the 4th one too, right? Plus I would've probably forgotten the plot in a year. In other words: was bound for failure right from the beginning.

... and now I'm wondering if I could just possibly insert yet another I somewhere in this paragraph: I!

sorry bro

Two years have passed since and Thursday is ready to go back to the Real World, and get her husband reactualized. Easier said than done. Her friends at Jurisfiction are not ready for a new Bellman, her son Friday needs a nanny, and 'back home' she's still very much a wanted criminal.

Since it never pours but rains, she finds that Yorrick Kaine (the villain from ), is about to be elected a dictator for life. The evil multinational Goliath Corporation has decided to 'up the ante' by backing Kaine's candidacy and also angling to become a religion.

Luckily, all this can be avoided if the Swindon Mallets win the 1988 Superhoop. Too bad their players suck.

Yeah, OK

I have to admit, there are LOTS of hilarious moments, tonnes of memorable quotes, and the televised election debates are extremely accurate:


'I will award three points to Mr Kaine for an excellent nonspecific condemnation, plus one bonus point for blaming the previous government, and another for successfully mutating the question to promote the party line. Mr van de Poste gets a point for a firm rebuttal, but only two points for his condemnation as he tried to inject an impartial and intelligent observation.'


I contamplated giving it a rating of 2/5, but the extremely satisfying ending tacked on an extra star. It would've been good enough to wrap-up the entire series... had decided to end the series here. Luckily for fans, that's not the case. I, however, will be taking an indefinite break from the books.

3/5 stars for yet another funny and quotable book from the Thursday Next series.
==========================================
Review of the 2nd book: Lost in a Good Book
Review of the 3rd book: The Well of Lost Plots
Profile Image for BrokenTune.
755 reviews221 followers
June 12, 2016
4.5*

"I knocked at their door and, hearing no answer, walked in. When I was last working at SpecOps we rarely heard anything from the mildly eccentric members of the time-travelling elite, but when you work in the time business, you don’t waste it by nattering � it’s much too precious. My father always argued that time was far and away the most valuable commodity we had and that temporal profligacy should be a criminal offence � which kind of makes watching Celebrity Kidney Swap or reading Daphne Farquitt novels a crime straight away."


After being disappointed by book #2 and skipping book #3, I loved this one. Something Rotten had just the right mix of silliness with thoughtful digs at current affairs and contemporary discussions such as the argument about what makes humans human and what gives humans have the right to control other species, or the rights of other groups of humans for that matter.

Thursday has returned from the book world and again takes up the pursuit of a shady character that threatens the country. But, Thursday has not returned alone - Hamlet (aka the "ditherer") has come with her and so has Alan. I loved Alan, and I am having to read the rest of the series just to find out how he fares.

Yes. Never mind Thursday and the fate of Landon, my interests in this series are thoroughly invested in Pickwick and Alan!
Profile Image for Ashley Marie .
1,450 reviews387 followers
September 9, 2019
This might be my favorite book of the series. Time travel gives me a headache but Fforde handles it very well across this series, and the inclusion of classic characters remains a joy. (I still need a Mrs Tiggy-Winkle figurine for my bookshelf. Christmas, anyone?) The one mistake I made after Well of Lost Plots was to go reading about Thursday Next on Wikipedia -- spoilered myself for Granny Next, but that actually resolved itself in this book! Huzzah! And it was quite... I feel like I've used "unexpectedly poignant" too recently to bust it out again, but... yes.

At any rate, I love these books and I love Jasper's imagination. Each of these books feels like a cobbled-together NaNoWriMo project, and personally it gives me much hope when NaNoWriMo rolls around each year.
Profile Image for Book Concierge.
3,033 reviews381 followers
June 24, 2017
Book on CD read by Emily Gray.

Book four in the Thursday Next fantasy / sci-fi “literary detective� series. The Goliath Corporation is still trying to take over the world, though this time their scheme is to be declared a religion. Hamlet is staying with Thursday and her family, while she tries to sort out the mess that all the cloned Shakespeares have made of the original play. Thursday’s father, the rogue ChronoGuard, and her mad-scientist Uncle Mycroft, both make significant, though small, contributions.

What I most enjoy about this series is Fforde’s vivid imagination and all the literary references. The plots are completely unrealistic, but that’s part of the fun. Thursday is a strong, independent, resourceful heroine, and the supporting characters � Spike, the vampire, and Stig, the Neanderthal, in particular � are delightfully over-the-top. The SuperHoop (think “Super Bowl� for croquet) match is fun and thrilling and ridiculous all at once.

If this review doesn’t make much sense � well, neither does the book. But who cares?! It’s fun to read.

Emily Gray does a marvelous job performing the audio version. She has great pacing and is a skilled voice artist, able to differentiate the many characters. I love the way she voices Stig and St Zvlkx in this installment.
Profile Image for Luann.
1,299 reviews122 followers
September 9, 2016
This took me a LONG time to get into. It has been on my "to-read" list since 2008, so for a while I wondered why I even bothered. I started enjoying it about half way through, and then I came across a passage that made the whole thing worth it:



When I read it, I laughed out loud, and it made me feel like she was looking right at me! I put a marker in the page so I could read it again, which I did several times and enjoyed chuckling each time. I even had to share the passage with my husband.

By the end of the book, I was really enjoying it. If I jump into right away, maybe it won't take me so long to get into the story and remember the characters.
Profile Image for Lanie.
84 reviews13 followers
March 16, 2016
After belong a little disappointed by the third book, this one was back in the 'real world', and just as much fun as the first two.
The plot was deliberately complex, full of twists and turns. Nevertheless I found it easy to understand as events follow their own internal logic.

The bad people were vanquished, the good people won (but not without cost), the funny characters amused, and the dodos waddled in occasionally to do their dodo thing.

By the end of the book the major story lines were resolved in ways that were both dramatic and humorous, while enough minor questions were left open to allow for further adventures.

A very satisfying read. I will certainly read the next one.

BTW, I thought the Brought-Vincent-Norton motorcycle factory was a Triumph.
Profile Image for Donna.
4,380 reviews135 followers
April 3, 2015
This was just okay for me. There was so much going on. The author kept it reigned in, but it was like a jumbo zig zag. Usually I like busy, so I'm not sure why this rubbed me the wrong way. There was also a fair amount of repetition which caused eye rolling....not excessive eye rolling...just basic eye rolling.

I liked Thurdsay. She was great. I also liked Hamlet. He seemed like the comic relief. Everything else was just okay.
Profile Image for Ric.
1,343 reviews132 followers
January 18, 2022
This series just gets better and better, and if you haven’t read definitely put it on your radar. Something Rotten was my favorite of the bunch so far, because it had everything. Thursday trying to take down comically corrupt politicians (that were way to accurate), Hamlet learning to be more decisive, a corporation turning into a religion, and a croquet match for the ages. It’s unbelievably good and somehow raises the already sky high bar for the series.
Profile Image for Fefi.
1,015 reviews16 followers
March 11, 2019
Ultimo libro di questa serie geniale ad essere tradotto in italiano,ce ne sono poi degli altri,ma in effetti la storia si può concludere qui.
Thursday,dopo aver partorito un bel maschietto,ha nostalgia del mondo reale e così decide di tornare a casa sua, a Swindon, con la speranza di riavere di nuovo suo marito sradicato.
Non sarà sola, da Giurisfiction,il Mondo dei libri, si porterà dietro Amleto,curioso di capire perché i lettori lo considerino sempre così indeciso; si ritroverà a dover lottare nuovamente contro la Goliath,che nel frattempo vuole diventare una religione,verrà anche immischiata in un pasticcio genetico di William e il tutto sarà mescolato da una feroce satira sui danesi.
Il finale è perfetto con nonna Next che è...

Sono contenta di essere riuscita a leggere finalmente questi libri ricchi di satira, paradossi e situazioni surreali che mi hanno accompagnata, piacevolmente ,fin dall'inizio.
Alcuni momenti sono un po' lenti,soprattutto se,come me, non si ha una grande cultura di autori inglesi classici, ma è tanta la curiosità di sapere quale genialità aspetterà il lettore che poi tutto scorre velocemente.
Consigliati se conoscete un po' lo stile di scrittura del vecchissimo P.G. Wodehouse (per l'umorismo), del buon Terry Pratchett (per la satira)e del caotico Douglas Adams (per la parte di fantascienza strana).
Profile Image for Sarah.
245 reviews2 followers
October 6, 2021
This series is fun and full of humor and literary nerd jokes. The conceit starts to get a bit thin, but the series wraps up nicely here. I know there's a second series. I'm not sure I need that much more in this universe--maybe in a few months. Overall, though, Fforde is highly inventive and admirable, and the characters are warm-hearted and easy to like.
Profile Image for Sarah.
23 reviews4 followers
November 9, 2023
Diese Reihe wird einfach von Band zu Band besser! Ein grandioser vierter Teil!!
Profile Image for Stephen Richter.
866 reviews35 followers
November 4, 2017
The fate of the world depends on the results of the Superhoop, with help from the cloned Neanderthals wholly owned by Goliath Corporation, now a religion after a year of bad press. Thursday Next is back in the real world after hiding out in the world of unpublished novels. books are wonderfully crazy .
Profile Image for Kyle.
462 reviews14 followers
April 23, 2014
Happy birthday, William Shakespeare, and as a gift for your 450th, I present to you an excellent book written for your 440th. Jasper Fforde has exactly the same love of reading and writer's inventiveness as many of the great ones who are inspired by your creativity. Not only does he give Hamlet some thoughtful reflection upon his role as a dithering protagonist, but also literally brings you back to life with all the tragic consequences of your great plays. Okay, not even King Lear suggests an armageddon like Something Rotten's threat of global nuclear warfare, and you certainly held back on the puns and cartoon-like violence. Beyond this surreal alternate reality surface is that mirror held up to nature for those who have "drunk ink," as it were.

In case you "had left vnſeene a wonderfull peece of worke" known as Thursday Next, allow me to explain how much she fits in with the thousands and thousands of inspired characters derived from your plays. First of all, she has met with and worked alongside many many of literature's brightest stars, but is level-headed and pragmatic in an otherwise chaotic fictional world. Returning to her home world to find, as the title suggests, things rotten in Swindon, she takes on as many of these burdens as she can manage, never being crushed by the responsibility nor the silly wordplay. No matter how much she seems to know about the future and events in the past that went otherwise, she knows of the urgency to do the right thing when the time comes. And only at the midpoint of her highly entertaining series, each novel she is in feels like her story is just beginning to unfold. Finally, although she is based upon so many wonderful parts, Thursday has the one quality you seem to enjoy most: originality.
Profile Image for Paul.
2,210 reviews
September 21, 2014
Two years have passed and Thursday is still working in Jurisfiction and hunting the Minotaur, but she longs to return to the real world and find Landen, previously eradicated by the Goliath Corporation. Her son Friday is now two

She returns to Swindon with Hamlet, who wants to see what the real world is like and stays with her mother and father. She gets her job back at SpecOps and starts to find out all she has missed. President George Formby is still in power but the Goliath Corporation has made allegiances with Yorrick Kaine and plan to oust him. Kaine has growing power and influence and is using it to stir up hatred of Denmark, and has sought the services of 'The Windowmaker' (a spelling mistake, but it was too late to correct) an assassin who turns out to be the wife of a friends of hers.

She meets with the CEO of the Goliath Corporation to try again to get Landen back, and they promise that they will for her forgiveness, but she is convinced that she has had some mind control applied. Landedn appears, but it takes a while for reality to get used to him being there so he keeps disappearing. Her father, now re-admitted to the time-travelling ChronoGuard, warns her of the perils that Kaine's plan pose. Along with the Goliath Corporation planning to become a religion to avoid the prophecy that they are doomed to fail, and that Thursday has to get the Swindon Mallets to win the 1988 Croquet Superhoop to avoid the end of the world, her biggest problem is getting childcare.

Not quite as good as the previous one the the series, it didn't seem to have the focus of the last. That said, I do like the way that Fforde writes these, they are cleverly done, and full of wit and ideas and sub plots that turn and twist.
Profile Image for Lost Planet Airman.
1,283 reviews89 followers
November 12, 2012
TN4: I enjoyed it less than the first three -- it was a 'helicopter', a lot of unrelated parts moving in synchrony, that yet somehow seem to get the story from point A to point B. However, we get a few answers! (Of course, it would be a spoiler to give them all away. But, gingham? Really?) It has a lot to recommend it to the literophile, especially fans of the Revernd Dodgson (I really hope I spelled his name correctly. Oh, wait -- I'm on the Internet!
Profile Image for Kylie.
19 reviews2 followers
April 8, 2025
My absolute favourite of the Thursday Next series. It doesn’t matter how many times I read it (and believe me, I’ve read this series more times than I can count!), the final chapter still has the ability to give me goosebumps.
Profile Image for John.
1,811 reviews56 followers
March 22, 2019
Top flight stuff, with Thursday keeping about six balls in the air at once, clues to what's about to happen slipped in so deftly you don't notice, and relentlessly clever twists and details in a storyline capped by the most vicious game of croquet as ever was.
Profile Image for Pamela.
1,597 reviews
June 21, 2023
Delightful literary fantasy, full of bad jokes, literary references, bizarre characters and a twisty plot that links up plotlines from earlier in the series. Thursday Next returns from the fictional world to Swindon, hoping to find her husband Landen and introduce him to their son Friday. Accompanied by Hamlet Prince of Denmark and two dodos, she finds a world heading for disaster which can only be averted if Swindon wins the World Croquet Championship�.

This is such an enjoyable series, original and inventive and written to delight book lovers. Thursday is a great character and in this episode we see both her resourceful, feisty side and a touching side, especially in a surprisingly moving scene towards the end of the book. Knowing Swindon well, I loved seeing the alternative version of the town (here a city) that Fforde has created and spotting the familiar landmarks.

Very entertaining and amusing story, Fforde’s imagination and writing is amazing and I thoroughly enjoyed it.
Profile Image for Fiona.
640 reviews80 followers
February 23, 2018
I started this series actually with the second book, because we read it at an English course at University. Then I read the first book in German and just some time ago after years the third one again in English. I didn’t want to wait so long again, so I directly started the fourth book.
I liked this one even better than the third, even though there was less book jumping and literature involved (except for Hamlet). But still it was funny, it was exciting, it was just really enjoyable. I loved how Jasper Fforde writes about things. Like the political debates, where the participants get points for “who avoids to answer the question best� etc.
For me personally this would be a good end of the series, but as it is not, I already bought the next one to read it soon.
Profile Image for Serena.. Sery-ously?.
1,134 reviews224 followers
November 6, 2018
Ci sono io che quando mi sento di aver avuto un'idea geniale è perché sono riuscita a portare la tazza del tè con il piattino dei biscotti sopra per fare un viaggio solo..
... E poi c'è Jasper Fforde che fa parlare Friday in Lorem Ipsum :D


Niente, vado a prendere lo straccio perché la mia idea geniale non si è poi rivelatoatanto tale..
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