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The Eyre Affair: A Thursday Next Novel Paperback – February 25, 2003

4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 5,085 ratings

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NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • The first novel in the renowned Thursday Next series, which “combines elements of Monty Python, Harry Potter, Stephen Hawking, and Buffy the Vampire Slayer” (The Wall Street Journal).

“A literary wonderland [that] recalls Douglas Adams’ Hitchhiker series [and] the works of Lewis Carroll.”—USA Today

Meet Thursday Next, “part Bridget Jones, part Nancy Drew, and part Dirty Harry” (Michiko Kakutani,
The New York Times), a literary detective without equal, fear, or boyfriend—and welcome to a surreal version of Great Britain, circa 1985, where time travel is routine, cloning is a reality (dodos are the resurrected pet of choice), and literature is taken very, very seriously. England is a virtual police state where an aunt can get lost (literally) in a Wadsworth poem, militant Baconians heckle performances of Hamlet, and forging Byronic verse is a punishable offense. All this is business as usual for Thursday, renowned Special Operative in literary detection, until someone begins kidnapping characters from works of literature.
 
When Jane Eyre is plucked from the pages of Brontë’s novel, Thursday must track down the villain and enter a novel herself to avert a heinous act of literary homicide.

Don’t miss any of Jasper Fforde’s delightfully entertaining Thursday Next novels:
THE EYRE AFFAIR • LOST IN A GOOD BOOK • THE WELL OF LOST PLOTS • SOMETHING ROTTEN • FIRST AMONG SEQUELS • ONE OF OUR THURSDAYS IS MISSING • THE WOMAN WHO DIED A LOT

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Shades of Grey The Constand Rabbit Early Riser Lost in a Good Book The Big Over Easy The Well of Lost Plots
Shades of Grey The Constant Rabbit Early Riser Lost in a Good Book The Big Over Easy The Well of Lost Plots
Customer Reviews
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More Books by Jasper Fforde

Editorial Reviews

From The New Yorker

It's 1985 in England, at least on the calendar; the Crimean War is in its hundred-and-thirty-first year; time travel is nothing new; Japanese tourists slip in and out of Victorian novels; and the literary branch of the special police, led gamely by the beguiling Thursday Next, are pursuing Acheron Hades, who has stolen the manuscript of "Martin Chuzzlewit" and set his sights on kidnapping the character Jane Eyre, a theft that could have disastrous consequences for Brontë lovers who like their story straight. This rambunctious caper could be taken as a warning about what might happen if society considered literature really important—like, say, energy futures or accounting.
Copyright © 2005
The New Yorker

Review

“Neatly delivers alternate history, Monty Pythonesque comedy skits, Grand Guignol supervillains, thwarted lovers, po-mo intertextuality, political commentary, time travel, vampires, absent-minded inventors, a hard-boiled narrator, and lots, lots more. . . . Suspend your disbelief, find a quiet corner and just surrender to the storytelling voice of the unstoppable, ever-resourceful Thursday Next.”
—The Washington Post

“Fforde’s imaginative novel will satiate readers looking for a Harry Potter-esque tale. . . . 
The Eyre Affair’s literary wonderland recalls Douglas Adams’s Hitchhikers series, the works of Lewis Carroll and Woody Allen’s The Kugelmass Episode.”
USA Today

“[Thursday Next is] part Bridget Jones, part Nancy Drew, and part Dirty Harry.”
—Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times

“Delightfully clever . . . Filled with clever wordplay, literary allusion and bibliowit, 
The Eyre Affair combines elements of Monty Python, Harry Potter, Stephen Hawking and Buffy the Vampire Slayer, but its quirky charm is all its own.” 
The Wall Street Journal

“Jasper Fforde’s first novel, 
The Eyre Affair, is a spirited sendup of genre fiction—it’s part hardboiled mystery, part time-machine caper—that features a sassy, well-read ‘Special Operative in literary detection’ named Thursday Next, who will put you more in mind of Bridget Jones than Miss Marple.  Fforde delivers almost every sentence with a sly wink, and he’s got an easy way with wordplay, trivia, and inside jokes. . . . Fforde’s verve is rarely less than infectious.” 
The New York Times Book Review

“Jasper Fforde’s genre-busting, whoppingly imaginative first novel,
The Eyre Affair, is packed with literary allusions . . . .Thanks to Fforde’s terrific imagination, this definitely will not be the winter of our discontent.”
The Miami Herald

“For sheer inventiveness his book is hard to beat.
The Eyre Affair is an exuberant mélange of crime, comedy and alternative history.”
Houston Chronicle

The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde could hardly be more delightful. . . . It takes a bold adventurer to play fast and loose with literature, and that’s what we have in Thursday Next and Fforde.”
Newsday

“[Fforde] delivers multiple plot twists, rampant literary references and streams of wild metafictional invention in a novel that places literature at the center of the pop-cultural universe. . . . It all adds up to a brainy, cheerfully twisted adventure.”
Time Out New York

A blend of suspense and silliness, two parts fantasy (think Alice in Wonderland meet Superman), two parts absurdity (anything by Carl Hiaasen) and one part mystery (Agatha Christie meets Sue Grafton).”
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

“Her name is Next. Thursday Next. And her story is as amusing and intriguing as the summary of her story told within the pages of
The Eyre Affair. Next is a literary detective in a world so enamored with the written world that Shakespeare’s Richard III is staged nightly as if it were The Rocky Horror Picture Show . . . . The novel’s writing flows and the imaginative twists and turns in Next’s world are handled smoothly.”
Sun-Sentinel

'Always ridiculous, often hilarious ... blink and you miss a vital narrative leap. There are shades of Douglas Adams, Lewis Carroll, 'Clockwork Orange' and '1984'. And that's just for starters' Time Out London

"What Fforde is pulling is a variation on the classic Monty Python gambit: the incongruous juxtaposition og low comedy and high erudition - this scam has not been pulled off with such off-hand finesse and manic verve since the Pythons shut up shop. 'The Eyre Affair' is a silly book for smart people: postmodernism played as raw, howling farce"― Independent (London)

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Penguin Books (February 25, 2003)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 400 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0142001805
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0142001806
  • Reading age ‏ : ‎ 18 years and up
  • Lexile measure ‏ : ‎ 780L
  • Grade level ‏ : ‎ 12 and up
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 9.6 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 7.7 x 5.1 x 0.72 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 5,085 ratings

About the author

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Jasper Fforde
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Jasper Fforde is the critically acclaimed author of The Last Dragonslayer series: THE LAST DRAGONSLAYER, THE SONG OF THE QUARKBEAST and THE EYE OF ZOLTAR, SHADES OF GREY, the Nursery Crime books: THE BIG OVER EASY and THE FOURTH BEAR and the Thursday Next novels: THE EYRE AFFAIR, LOST IN A GOOD BOOK, THE WELL OF LOST PLOTS, SOMETHING ROTTEN, FIRST AMONG SEQUELS, ONE OF OUR THURSDAYS IS MISSING and THE WOMAN WHO DIED A LOT.

After giving up a varied career in the film world, he now lives and writes in Wales, and has a passion for aviation.

To find out more visit Jasper's website www.jasperfforde.com, Facebook page www.facebook.com/jasperffordebooks or follow him on Twitter @jasperfforde.

Customer reviews

4.3 out of 5 stars
5,085 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the humor in the book fun, amusing, and charming. They describe the creativity as fascinatingly imaginative, full of surprises, and surreal moments. Readers praise the characters as compelling, well-developed, and colorful. They appreciate the literary references and layers of references. Opinions are mixed on the writing quality, with some finding it well-written and easy to read, while others say it's confusing and doesn't always make sense.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

206 customers mention "Humor"206 positive0 negative

Customers find the humor in the book fun, witty, and amusing. They also say the book is packed with literary inside jokes and is charmingly silly. Readers mention the book has a sense of humor in a similar vein to The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.

"...This is about clever wordplay and literary allusions, about politics and religion, but primarily about having fun in a wonderful adventure with many..." Read more

"...Thursday Next is a likable and believable protagonist, which is a key feature considering how many other things the book asks you to believe as well...." Read more

"...I would like to highlight the fact that the author makes lots of literary allusions, but that is only to be expected, due to the fact that in..." Read more

"...Though this lighthearted story can be enjoyable so long as you don't try to take it seriously, this isn't a novel I would give a second read...." Read more

193 customers mention "Creativity"156 positive37 negative

Customers find the book imaginative, full of surprises, and surreal moments. They describe it as an interesting concept in many ways. Readers also mention the plot is interesting, clever, and original.

"...serve to very effectively both convey crucial background information and provide an air of authenticity...." Read more

"...The characters are well-drawn and plot clips along at a good pace, and around every turn of the page there's a new nifty bit to discover...." Read more

"...I can guarantee something: you won't be bored. The plot has a high degree of unpredictability, and some characters are not only atypical but also..." Read more

"...The alternate reality Fforde has created is fascinatingly imaginative, but his enthusiasm for it is one of the biggest problems with the novel...." Read more

53 customers mention "Character development"41 positive12 negative

Customers find the characters compelling, strong, and colorful. They also say some of the names make them laugh. Readers mention the book is fantastic and filled with a tough woman detective.

"...Thursday Next is a likable and believable protagonist, which is a key feature considering how many other things the book asks you to believe as well...." Read more

"...I swear I've only just scratched the surface. The characters are a ton of fun as well, especially the protagonist- Thursday Next...." Read more

"...The supporting characters in this book are wonderful. They have been given just as much thought and attention to detail as the main character...." Read more

"...For example, the naming of his characters got a bit annoying after a while, as it seemed that every character had to have a clever-sounding name...." Read more

27 customers mention "Literary references"21 positive6 negative

Customers find the book filled with both learned and slapstick puns. They say it's filled with many layers of references to classics. Readers also mention the book has everything, including alternate history with a literary bent.

"...It has a gazillion little play on words, literary references, and random shout outs to books that it was a fantastic treat for me...." Read more

"...This book has everything. And that's not only an understatement, it's the truth.But reader (and listener), beware...." Read more

"...I was fascinated by all the historical and literature references...." Read more

"...time travel is tricky but quite natural, and literature is paramount...." Read more

11 customers mention "Style"11 positive0 negative

Customers find the style enchanting, appealing, and personal. They appreciate the wonderful riff on classic literature, well-drawn characters, and literary references sprinkled throughout. Readers also say the story is part sleuth and part lit nerd.

"...The Eyre Affair" has a dreamlike quality I consider enchanting and very appealing...." Read more

"...Nevertheless, "The Eyre Affair" is a wonderfully fresh and unique style that isn't categorized easily...." Read more

"...action requires it, giving the story a very personal, but enjoyable, style...." Read more

"...The main character, Thursday Next, is well drawn and the author uses time travel intriguingly." Read more

10 customers mention "Romance"10 positive0 negative

Customers find the romance in the book to be great. They also say it has humor, love, and time warps.

"...It has romance, action, tons of fantasy and sci-fi, comedy that's hilarious if you have that sense of humor, and it's all wrapped up in the package..." Read more

"...However I totally enjoyed myself and liked the little bit of romance, chase of the bad guy and trip through the pages of Jane Eyre...." Read more

"...It is a “fantasy, science fiction, mystery, satire, romance, thriller” of a book...." Read more

"...Affair is equal parts fantasy, alternate history, science fiction, romance, and, oh yes, zany comedy..." Read more

50 customers mention "Writing quality"28 positive22 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the writing quality of the book. Some mention it's well-written, easy to read, and reads like a Doctor Who episode. However, others say it's confusing, convoluted, and hard to follow.

"...As befits a book about bibliophiles, the language is clear and crisp and even when things go all pear-shaped you can generally follow the thread...." Read more

"...It was fun, but it didn't always make sense, even within the "rules" of its own world...." Read more

"...his literature, the language of the novel is, for the most part, an easy read...." Read more

"...There is a plot; it is most definitely unique and extremely convoluted. However, it is worth the effort...." Read more

26 customers mention "Pacing"9 positive17 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book. Some mention it's fast and never drags, while others say it drags and is over too quickly.

"...as the number of pointless side plots, and they are often hard to keep up with...." Read more

"But I found it to be a rollicking good time...." Read more

"...is that the story before Jane Eyre was introduced drags a little in some sections...." Read more

"...The chapters are all pretty short yet, somehow, the pace of the book drags...." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on April 14, 2004
Surreal ! This is a literary adventure in a parallel universe; Great Britain in 1985, the year perhaps chose to leave no doubt that this is science fiction of the "almost might have been" variety rather than the speculative type which fantasizes about "one of many possible futures" . The Crimean war still has Russia and England facing off as adversaries after 130 years, air travel is by "gas bag", the border between England and the People's Republic of Wales is sealed, and occasional rents in the space time continuum are repaired by the Chronoguards (SO-12). (In fact, Tuesday's father is a renegade member of the Office for Special Temporal Stability, but in fact perhaps I need his help since I seem to have gotten ahead of myself.) The Special Operations (SO) network has been formed to handle specialized and unusual police matters, with the thirty departments being denoted by a number in reverse order to their secrecy and hierarchal rank. When we are introduced to Thursday Next (the enjoyable heroine of this tale), she is a Literatec, that is, an SO-27, an operative in the Literary Detective Division. However, she is about to be temporarily assigned to SO-5, a department so secret that its name cannot be revealed but is attempting to trace the mysterious disappearance of the original manuscript of MARTIN CHUZZLEWIT.
So, if you are willing to suspend belief and return to the days of your youth, when the arch villains did battle against the white hats, vampires existed, and reading stories transported you into the worlds of their protagonists, then join Thursday and discover what's Next. This is about clever wordplay and literary allusions, about politics and religion, but primarily about having fun in a wonderful adventure with many interesting twists and turns. You will even be privy to an ingenious explanation of who really was responsible for Shakespeare's plays (a continual question for SO-27 operatives to ponder), as well as experience an hilarious production of RICHARD III. The more knowledge of literature you have, the more you will appreciate the truly remarkable job the author has done of weaving such illusions into the text (e.g., remember that James Boswell wrote the LIFE OF SAMUEL JOHSON), but even without much specific knowledge the author's Clif Notes are provided so that you can appreciate how Thursday's adventures changed the lives of Edward Rochester and Jane Eyre.
When I read the description of the series of which this book is the initial entry, I was not sure that the author would be able to keep my attention while enabling me to engage in the necessary suspension of belief, but he has created a storytelling methodology that fully engaged me. The brief introductory paragraph at the beginning of each chapter (excerpted from various narrative accounts concerning the proceedings), serve to very effectively both convey crucial background information and provide an air of authenticity. I strongly recommend that you read this book when you want to meet such interesting characters as Ms. Paige Turner and the almost immortalized fiend, Felix Tabularasa. The creativeness of Fforde's imagination rivals that of the extraordinary scifi writer Philip K. Dick, except that this is world of exciting adventures and happy endings (at least before the next assignment beckons to Thursday), rather than the stark and often depressing possibilities that Dick's imagination envisioned. I was also impressed with the ability of Fforde to subsequently answer questions which had been raised by certain elements of the narrative and to cleverly tie up several loose ends or unexplained happenings; of course, you have to accept the fantasy of the alternative universe which he creates, but there is internal consistency within the rules of that world.
I have chosen not to reveal too many details of the plot, both in order not to spoil it and also because a brief review could not do it justice. But I believe that you will enjoy entering the world of Thursday Next, and will soon find yourself LOST IN A GOOD BOOK (the sequel). And you will also probably fantasize about which novels you would like to enter and perhaps improve the plot, meet the characters, or experience the action if only you had the ability to engage in book jumping. But you'll have to read THE EYRE AFFAIR to learn how to accomplish that feat, I won't tell.
Tucker Andersen
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Reviewed in the United States on March 15, 2011
NOTE: This is an excerpt of my full review, which can be found here: [...]
Where to begin? The year is 1985 (as opposed to 1984, presumably) and the place is an alternate-England which is still the most powerful nation in the world, has never known Winston Churchill, is in a cold war with the Republic of Wales, and in a hot war with the Empire of Russia over the Crimean peninsula. The protagonist, Thursday Next, is a literary detective, tasked with keeping original manuscripts safe from fanatic academics or would-be kidnappers and generally protecting the extremely-book-minded people of Britain from the scourge of literary crimes. Next is born of a remarkable family that includes her time-stopping rogue temporal cop father, and her uncle Mycroft who invented a pencil with a spell-checker and is working on a sarcasm early-warning device. When one of Mycroft's inventions, a portal that enables you to literally step into or out of a book, is stolen by Acheron Hades (the third wickedest man in the world), Next must stop the kidnapping or assassination of literature's most beloved characters, including Jane Eyre herself.

And this, mind you, is the bare-bones description of the plot. We won't even go into the vampire hunt gone wrong, the black hole that opens up over the freeway and tears a hole in spacetime, or the running subplot about who actually authored Shakespeare's plays.

Lest I be too ambiguous for my own good, let me state clearly: I very much enjoyed The Eyre Affair and if the description above sounds like the kind of thing you'd enjoy, I recommend it without hesitation. The characters are well-drawn and plot clips along at a good pace, and around every turn of the page there's a new nifty bit to discover. This is a book that's packed full of interesting ideas thrown at you in rapid succession, so you'll never be bored. Thursday Next is a likable and believable protagonist, which is a key feature considering how many other things the book asks you to believe as well. The book is very thoroughly, almost achingly, postmodern ... if there was such a thing as post-postmodern, this book would be it. Some might consider this a bug, but I consider it a feature, at least in this particular case. I don't always want books going all Ferris Bueller on me, but if a book is going to, then I want it to do it as well as The Eyre Affair does.

Unfortunately, the further away you get from Next, the less believable the characters come to be. Almost everyone in this book has a clever shtick, whether in the form of a joke name (recurring annoyance/semi-antagonist Jack Schitt, earnest but put-upon fellow cop Victor Analogy, and of course the villain himself Acheron Hades) or in the mere oddness of their existence (such as Felix7 and his replacement Felix8, who are simply the latest in a series of Hades' henchmen to have the same face grafted on in memory of the original Felix). After a while it can become hard to keep thinking of these characters as actual characters, because they're more like a series of funny ideas that have been given dialog.

This also makes motivations start to come off wobbly. Characters find themselves in love a lot here, except with all the usual steps (meeting, learning each others' name, actually talking to each other for more than a sentence) all being handwaved into the backstory or just left offstage entirely; not just one but two romantic triangles are introduced and then dropped again like hot potatoes. The villains of the piece are just as sketchy: Hades is just born bad and likes it; Jack Schitt aims for the moral gray-zone but doesn't ever really sound like he means it.
Finally, the sheer weirdness of the setting also undermines the book's core premise: in a world as over-the-top as the book's is, how could an essentially realistic work such as Jane Eyre even exist, without also being a reflection of the weird world it inhabits? In a setting where demonic arch-criminals walk through the walls and you occasionally find yourself jumping back in time six months by accident, why aren't there jetpacks and dinosaurs running around in the works of Charlotte Bronë?

Still, none of these things kill the book by any means, they're just things that struck me while I was reading. Keep in mind that I have a very analytical mind, and so I pick apart everything as I go. If you're more inclined to just jump in to a book and ride it like a rollercoaster, these things probably won't bug you at all.

As befits a book about bibliophiles, the language is clear and crisp and even when things go all pear-shaped you can generally follow the thread. I read the Kindle edition and there were a few odd typos in the form of hyphens that didn't need to be there or paragraph breaks erroneously shoved into a sentence, but nothing truly egregious. I will warn the reader that there are a few spots where the text gets even more meta than it already is, and so if you suddenly think you're reading the most badly-proofread book ever, you aren't. It's working as intended.
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Top reviews from other countries

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maria
5.0 out of 5 stars Ok
Reviewed in Italy on June 12, 2022
Namita
5.0 out of 5 stars Loved it
Reviewed in India on March 14, 2017
Must read for Jane Eyre fans who also enjoy whimsy ( read fantasy). I enjoyed it. A recommend from my end.
One person found this helpful
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Smilo
5.0 out of 5 stars Délicieux
Reviewed in France on September 16, 2016
Jasper Fforde nous emmène dans un monde inouï avec une imagination débordante! Drôle, déjanté, intelligent et quelque peu subversif! Lecture jouissive!
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Leonieke
5.0 out of 5 stars Literaire grapjes
Reviewed in the Netherlands on August 15, 2016
Heerlijk surrealistisch boek, met veel humor en kleine literaire grapjes. Met een beetje kennis van de Engelse klassieke literatuur kan je nog meer diepte uit dit boek halen.
Altijd fijn nieuws: er zijn nog 6 delen in deze serie!
Chelidona
5.0 out of 5 stars Herrlichst Absurd
Reviewed in Germany on January 6, 2014
Dieses Buch las ich auf Empfehlung einer Freundin - sie hat damit bei mir etwas gut. Der Rezension vom 10. Oktober 2001 ist eigentlich nichts hinzuzufügen "Irrwitzig, abgefahren, genial". Ich war auf fast jeder zweiten Seite wieder überrascht von der neuen absurden, genialen, verdrehten Wendung, die das Buch nahm.
Nein, Tiefgang hat das Buch nicht viel. Aber für mich hätte das auch abgelenkt von der Absurdität des Ganzen. Das Buch probiert nicht mehr zu sein, als intelligente Unterhaltung. Und dafür hat es bei mir 5 Sterne verdient.
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