Thursday Next in The well of lost plots
(2004)

Fiction

Book

Call Numbers:
MYSTERY/FFORDE,J

Availability

Locations Call Number Status
Mysteries MYSTERY/FFORDE,J Available

Details

PUBLISHED
New York : Viking, 2004
EDITION
First American edition
DESCRIPTION

xv, 375 pages : color illustrations ; 22 cm

ISBN/ISSN
0670032891 (alk. paper)
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Thursday next: Story so far -- Author's note -- Absence of breakfast--Inside caversham heights -- Three witches, multiple choice and sarcasm -- Landen Parke-Laine -- Well of lost plots -- Night of the grammasites -- Feeding the minotaur -- Ton-sixty on the a419 -- Apples Benedict, a hedgehog and Commander Bradshaw -- Jurisfiction session no. 40319 -- Introducing ultra world -- Wuthering heights -- Reservoir near the church of St. Stephen -- Educating the generics -- Landen Parke-somebody -- Captain Nemo -- Minotaur trouble -- Snell rest in peece and Lucy Deane -- Shadow the sheepdog -- Ibb and Obb named and heights again -- Who stole the tarts? -- Crimean nightmares -- Jurisfiction session no. 40320 -- Pledges, the council of genres and searching for Deane -- Havisham-the final bow -- Post-havisham blues -- Lighthouse at the edge of my mind -- Lola departs and heights again -- Mrs. Bradshaw and Solomon (judgments) inc. -- Revelations -- Tables turned -- 923rd annual book world awards -- Ultra word -- Loose ends -- Heavy weather (bonus chapter exclusive to the u.s. Edition) -- Credits

Thursday Next definitely needs some downtime. After two rollicking New York Times-bestselling adventures through the Western literary canon, Britain's Prose Resource Operative was literally and literaturally at her wit's end -- not to mention pregnant. So what could be more welcome than a restful stint in the Character Exchange Program down in the hidden depths of the Well of Lost Plots? But a vacation remains elusive. In no time, Thursday discovers that the Well of Lost Plots is a veritable linguistic free-for-all where grammasites run rampant, plot devices are hawked on the black market and lousy books (like the one she has taken up residence in) are scrapped for salvage. To top it off, a murderer is stalking Jurisfiction personnel and nobody is safe, least of all Thursday herself. Once again, it's up to the ever-resourceful gal detective to track down the killer, save her pulp novel-slash-temporary abode from being chucked into the Text Sea, and get back to her "real" life with her body (and memory, if it's not too much to ask) intact. Jasper Fforde has done it again in this absolutely brilliant feat of literary showmanship. When it comes to sheer wit, literate fantasy and effervescent originality, nothing can touch this new Ffordian tour de force

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