The Eyre Affair (Thursday Next, #1)

The Eyre Affair (Thursday Next #1)

3.92 of 5 stars 3.92  ·  rating details  ·  55,163 ratings  ·  5,373 reviews
"The first in a series of outlandishly clever adventures featuring the resourceful, fearless literary detective Thursday Next-a New York Times bestseller In Jasper Fforde's Great Britain, circa 1985, 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 a...more
ebook, 304 pages
Published February 25th 2003 by Penguin Books (first published July 19th 2001)

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Pride and Prejudice by Jane AustenJane Eyre by Charlotte BrontëHarry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone by J.K. RowlingMurder at the Vicarage by Agatha ChristieThe Body in the Library by Agatha Christie
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Community Reviews

(showing 1-30 of 3,000)
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Manny
Nov 20, 2010 Manny rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Anyone who's read Jane Eyre
Recommended to Manny by: oriana, notgettingenough and others too numerous to mention
This is so much fun. I want to play too! And, as it happens, I have a surprisingly good opening. So, with the usual perfunctory apologies, may I present

The Meyre Affair: a Thursday Next story
The hardest part is telling them they're fictional. After that, the rest is usually easy.

- Thursday Next, A Life in SpecOps
I could start this story at any number of points, but I will choose the moment when I knocked on Manny Rayner's front door. Nothing happened, so I knocked again. He opened it.

There was...more
Cassy
Sometimes I fear that I am becoming a jaded reader. I will catch myself muttering in the middle of a long series of yawns, “Haven’t I read this plot/character/technique before?” Or when the author describes their setting, I will lazily flip through my mental inventory of backdrops until, sure enough, I find an old one that it is a good enough fit to reuse.

Then Fforde comes along and throws the literary equivalent of a bucket of Arctic cold water in my face.

I found myself having to actually wor...more
Cecily
I didn't enjoy this. It tries too hard to be clever and to cover many different genres (humour, sci fi, horror, detective, literary and more) whilst also being annoyingly silly. After 100 pages I ditched it - something I rarely do.

Thursday Next is a woman who is a literary detective in one of several alternative realities round about now. In hers, the Crimean War is still going. Somehow, in her society, manuscripts are stolen and guns are involved; she also manages to get into books and meet cha...more
piraterie
I had the same feeling after reading this as I had after reading The Looking Glass Wars. Fabulous idea, terrible execution. I was going to give it one more star than I gave that because it's not quite as badly written. And I liked the idea of door-to-door Baconians and Rocky Horrorized Richard III. But I changed my mind because the more I think about it, the more I didn't like it.

It was so smug and cutesy and in need of better editing. And it would have been better served by not being written in...more
Lisa Vegan
Mar 15, 2008 Lisa Vegan rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: those who enjoy the following: humor, mysteries, sci-fi, fantasy, literature & language
This is a thoroughly delightful and brilliant book. I chuckled and chortled all the way through this book; it’s hilarious. There are many interesting characters and I am eager to read the rest of this series. I’m not sure that the successive books will also get 5 stars from me: the clever premise might get a tad old; I’ll have to see. This unusual story is a bit difficult to define. It fits multiple genres: sci-fi, mystery, humor, fantasy, and fiction. And the author manages to create an entire...more
Jason Pettus
(The much longer full review can be found at the Chicago Center for Literature and Photography [cclapcenter.com].)

It's no secret that I'm a big fan of the literary genre known as "speculative" fiction; for those not familiar with it, the genre primarily concerns itself with historical questions of "what if?" What if the South had won the Civil War, for example, or the Nazis World War II? What if computers, robots and nuclear weapons had been invented in the 1840s instead of the 1940s? It is a gr...more
Danielle
I've been storing up some venom for this review, so be prepared.
First of all, I want to unleash my fury on whoever in the Rory Gilmore Book Club suggested this book as February's pick. To go from such a brilliant read as Jane Eyre to this was frustrating to say the least. It highlighted all the amateurish contrivances of Fforde's writing. I rolled my eyes so many times in the first four chapters, that I nearly gave myself a headache. And no, I'm sure it doesn't get better after that, that's jus...more
Krista
(Violence alert: The body count is high, plus some grossness factor.)
It’s a spy thriller. No, wait — it’s science fiction. No, wait — it’s literary criticism. No, wait — it’s art history. No, wait — it’s historical-political commentary. No, wait — it’s romantic comedy. No, wait — it’s an epic war drama. No, wait — it’s — oh, look — Japanese tourists!

While I applaud the spirit of many of the directions this novel takes, you kind of have to wonder if the author could have focused just a tad bit mo...more
Sfdreams
Jun 08, 2008 Sfdreams rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: everyone, especially those with a sense of humor
Recommended to Sfdreams by: Lisa Vegan
Shelves: reviewed
I resisted reading this book for quite awhile, but thankfully, my friend Lisa (LisaVegan), kept bugging me about it! I thought that I would not appreciate it as I have never read Jane Eyre. But, Lisa is right, you do not have to know anything about Jane Eyre to understand this book.

I am thankful to Lisa, and to Goodreads, because I probably would have never stumbled upon this delightful book otherwise, as I rarely visit the SF shelves at the library.

I only found one annoyance while reading--"the...more
Monique
The cover of my trade paperback copy of this book has this snippet of a review from The Wall Sreet Journal: “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.”

Now Harry Potter and Buffy I am most familiar with, so after reading this book, I must say that I would have to agree. I think I also ought to add that I've never read any author...more
Shannon (Giraffe Days)
It is 1985 and the world isn't quite as we know it. Nor is history the same. There's a lot of odd things going on, otherwordly creatures are real, some people can go back and forth in time, literature is BIG, and the Crimean war has been going on since the 1800s. Thursday Next, a veteran of this war, now works for SpecOps (Special Operations) 27- the Literatec division. She's a kind of literature detective, and when the original manuscript of Martin Chuzzlewit vanishes, she is brought into a muc...more
Hayes
Jul 24, 2009 Hayes rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Hayes by: Nell-lu
Stephanie Plum meets Voldemort:

Thursday Next, LiteraTec (with a vanishing sports car, a pet dodo, and a few bouts of time travel), investigates the theft of original manuscripts, of characters in books, of plots even, and meets the arch villain, Acheron Hades.

I almost loved this book, but it was just a little too weird. Lots of fun, good for an amusing weekend, but just a little over the top for me.

This book was sponsored by thelostbook.net, www.bookcrossing.com and TOAD NEWS International
Mike (the Paladin)
I wanted to like it, it sounded like a good idea, but I didn't.
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Okay, I've tried to read this three times before and could never get into it. My wife liked it and so did several others I know so....got the audio this time and I'll try again.

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I can't say I like this book. As noted before I have tried at least 3 times to read it because some of it's fans are so thrilled with it that I keep having...more
Jon
Jun 25, 2009 Jon rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Jon by: Alternative World Book Club June 2009
3.4 stars

A wonderful thing happened on the way to The Eyre Affair; I read Jane Eyre. For that alone I will be eternally grateful.

Otherwise, it was an enjoyable but forgettable mystery set in a chaotic vortex of genres spanning paranormal, science fiction, alternate history, and time travel. At one point, it even reminded me of Butcher's Dresden series.

The puns, literary references and alternate history gaffs intrigued me and sparked quick forays of research to confirm or deny my suspicions.

I...more
Dolors
Okay, I'm not very much into science fiction and time travel, but when a book is good, I like it whatever the plot (The time traveller's wife, Brave New World, Never let me go, Fahrenheit 451...I loved these ones).
Not the case with this novel, I'm sorry to say that I had to make and effort to finish it, I found myself skipping through the text, something I hadn't done for a long time now.
I read somewhere that this is a silly novel for smart people. Well, I might not be smart enough, but I agree...more
Nancy (NE)
I haven't had so much fun in a long time! A bibliophile's ride. England hasn't become an Empire and Russia is still governed by the Tsarists. They've been fighting the Crimean War for 131 years. Their society rules are enforced by many levels of SpecOps. Tuesday Next is the main character, who works for the literary detective division. Her father time travels. Her Uncle invents weird things. Someone is traveling in an out of famous works of literary fiction and poetry, kidnapping characters and...more
Martine
Jan 14, 2008 Martine rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: English lit buffs, Terry Pratchett fans
Jasper Fforde's Thursday Next series is an awful lot of fun for English lit geeks who cherish their classics. It is set in an alternate England where people have cloned dodos for pets, croquet is the national sport, time travelling is a regular part of life and literature enjoys the kind of position that beer, football, cricket and TV have today, meaning that the country eats, drinks and breathes literature. It would be a perfect place to live, if it weren't for the fact that (1) it is run by a...more
Elizabeth
My brother left a copy of The Wasteland when he visited me recently. It's been years since I last read it and it has been haunting me from its perch on top of a pile of books, which were piled on top of books already shelved, on top of an overflowing bookshelf, while I was re-reading The Eyre Affair. I finally gave in (without much strain) and read it again, then I read Eliot's notes, and searched out the German translations, and thought about pulling up that Sappho reference. Then I started thi...more
Christina Stind
The barriers between reality and fiction are softer than we think; a bit like a frozen lake. Hundreds of people can walk across it, but then one evening a thin spot develops and someone falls through; the hole is frozen over by the following morning." (s. 206)

This is the premise of The Eyre Affair. The main protagonist, Thursday Next, is a litterary agent - she deals with all kinds of crimes having to do with literature, forgery and the like.
She gets involved in the attempt to catch a super vill...more
John
My wife and I started listening to The Eyre Affair on our Thanksgiving trip and only recently finished it, but this unique novel proved quite delightful from start to finish. I'll say up front that no small portion of our enjoyment came from Elisabeth Sastre's reading. Jasper Fforde has a good narrative voice, but Sastre just plain has a good voice as the narrator of this tale. I suspect she could read the phone book with a sense of wit and charm behind the words.

I find it hard to give an adeq...more
Carlos
Sadly, I found this book to be a major disappointment. I'm huge fan of British comedy and science fiction--Monty Python, Douglas Adams, Dr. Who, Neil Gaiman--and something of an autodidact lit geek, so this novel which promises the exploits of a special agent who has to travel into the novel Jane Eyre in pursuit of a villain sounds right up my alley. So, what went wrong?

Let's start with the world building. While Fforde's alternate universe England is quite inventive, it's also tonally weird. Eng...more
Alana
6/18/08

Alright. I'm leaving the five star ranking. I've been waffling back and forth to changing it to four, but really, for the creativity alone, this book deserves notice.

The Eyre Affair is Jasper Fforde's first novel, and what a novel it is. For starters, this is a dream for the average person who calls themselves a book lover... a literary fantasy where the boundary between the world in books and the "real" world is decidedly thinner than we think. For instance, in this novel, Thursday Next...more
Sandi
I had heard good things about the Thursday Next series and had picked up a copy of the latest installment on Border's Buy One, Get One Half Off table. After I got it, I learned that you really have to read the preceding novels to understand it. The last two books I read left me really depressed, so I decided to pick up the first of the Thursday Next books, "The Eyre Affair."

This book provided me with the literary escape I needed. It made me laugh out loud with lines like "My name is Schitt. Jac...more
Ceridwen
Feb 24, 2009 Ceridwen rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Ceridwen by: Dave Whitaker
For the first hundred pages or so, I couldn't decide whether I liked this book or not. It's the tone, not that anyone mentions that sort of thing outside the classroom. I kept thinking about some poor translator trying to render this book into Russian or Swahili or something, and what a bugger all time of it she would have. Cheeky Britishisms, silly names, referents to historical events that didn't happen, or certainly didn't happen that way.

By midway, I was having a ball. I mean, the People's...more
Michael
A book set in an alternate reality where a literary detective chases after a criminal into the world of Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre, sounds like an awesome idea for a book. I love books about books, and adding a detective should have been a recipe for success. Sadly this wasn’t the case for The Eyre Affair, which is book one in the Thursday Next series by Jasper Fforde. While some people like the mix between fantasy and humour, I could never really get into this book. It was a light read with n...more
David
OK. Jasper and I started off on the wrong footing, when I mistakenly started with "The Well of Lost Plots". A number of people were kind enough to point out that starting in the middle of an established series, particularly one as eccentric as the Thursday Next books, was not really giving it a fair shake.

And they were absolutely right. I bought this book in Dublin on Wednesday and had devoured it by early Friday morning. It was hilarious. A few minor detours that didn't really move things forwa...more
Terence
I've been noticing that many of my GR Friends are reading these delightful books.

I'm not overly familiar with 19th century novelists (of any country) -- this may irrevocably tarnish my reputation in the eyes of some, but I've never read any Austen and have avoided Dickens like Typhoid Mary since Oliver Twist so I'm sure many of the literary references go right over my head -- but Thursday Next and the alternate Earth she inhabits is a marvelous conceit and Fforde is a very good writer.

Even us po...more
Ninja Sock Puppet
Aug 03, 2009 Ninja Sock Puppet rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Scott Bakula, Dirk Gently
Recommended to Ninja Sock Puppet by: Ceridwen
Something odd has happened.

I've known Compelling ever since I moved to Midwestern City. I'd never met anybody with a name like hers before. Compelling Introduction. Whose parents would do that to a kid? She left the city for places like New York and Key West, but she again lives here now with her husband and daughter. I was at a barbecue at her house this weekend and spoke with an old friend of hers I hadn't seen since I first moved to Midwestern City, a tall, dark, mysterious and charming man,...more
Helena
The fuel of this book seems to be the question: “wouldn’t it be cool if [someone] said/did/went through [crazy random happenstance]?”
The answer often is, no, no it wouldn’t. What it would be is tiring to see the author trying to fit it retroactively into the narrative.
I found the beginning tremendous; the rest is sadly one long wince. I think that happens when there are interesting ideas in the premise, but then you have to see the author grossly miscast Rochester as, on the whole, a jolly good...more
 ~Geektastic~
Dear Mr. Fforde,

You are a very clever writer, and I’m sure you know it; your plotting, however, leaves something to be desired. I have had some difficulty reconciling the witty, bantering tone of your novel The Eyre Affair with its hardboiled plotline and tendency to shift focus without warning. Also, you should note that just because you inserted exposition into the beginning of each chapter and labeled it as an excerpt from an imaginary biography or memoir does not for one second make it anyth...more
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and all the Thursday Next stories 3 44 Apr 18, 2013 04:47am  
The Ending (*Major Spoilers*) 28 207 Mar 29, 2013 03:18pm  
Challenge: 50 Books: Group Read: The Eyre Affair 42 68 Dec 29, 2012 11:42am  
Goodreads Librari...: Please combine 2 18 Nov 10, 2012 07:55am  
Read by Theme: The Eyre Affair 15 71 Aug 28, 2012 04:19am  
The Eyre Affair (Thursday Next #1)
The Eyre Affair (Thursday Next, #1)
The Eyre Affair (Thursday Next, #1)
The Eyre Affair (Thursday Next, #1)
Il caso Jane Eyre (Thursday Next, #1)

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Jasper Fforde is a novelist living in Wales. He is the son of John Standish Fforde, the 24th Chief Cashier for the Bank of England, whose signature used to appear on sterling banknotes, and is cousin of Desmond Fforde, married with the author Katie Fforde. His early career was spent as a focus puller in the film industry, where he worked on a number of films including Quills, GoldenEye, and Entrap...more
More about Jasper Fforde...
Lost in a Good Book (Thursday Next, #2) The Well of Lost Plots (Thursday Next #3) Something Rotten (Thursday Next, #4) The Big Over Easy (Nursery Crime, #1) First Among Sequels (Thursday Next, #5)

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