18 October 2011

Books: The Big Over Easy by Jasper Fforde (2005)


The Big Over Easy was Jasper Fforde’s first novel, yet when it failed to get a release, it was shelved. After the success of his first four Thursday Next novels, Fforde revisited this novel, extensively re-writing it to fit in the same (somewhat) alternate universe that his Thursday Next series. 

In this universe, the public judges its police force by how exciting and glamorous their cases are, so they can be followed in the (fictional) Amazing Crime Stories magazine. It is here we tumble into the seedy underbelly of the nursery crime. Inspector Jack Spratt (who had a cameo in The Well of Lost Plots), is a family man and head of the Nursery Crime Division, and with funding resources in slim decline, and a bungled case of the death of The Big Bad Wolf where he tried to have the pigs brought up murder charges, he’s in need of something big to save his career. He’s assigned investigating the murder of ovoid D-class nursery celebrity Humperdinck Jehoshaphat Aloysius van Dumpty, AKA Humpty Dumpty, who is found shattered to death beneath a wall in a shabby area of town.

What to Spratt and partner DS Mary Mary might first look like a suicide (and more importantly, his boss wants it to be), turns more sinister as they investigate - money laundering, deceit and lovers all over the place.

After reading Fforde’s Thursday Next novels, one gets the idea that with The Big Over Easy, these are ideas only he could do. His odd mixture of puns -Officer Gretel Kandelstyk-Maeker is one of many –and his riffs on typical mystery motifs is enjoyable (as each chapter begins with articles how albinos are being mistreated as terrorists, or on the banning of “identical twin” plots and such, or featuring stories about Miss Maple and Inspector Dogleash). Unlike his Thursday Next books, this book has a more linear plot, but I would say the reader should peruse the early Thursday Next novels to get a better understanding of Fforde’s motives.

All in all, a good mystery that makes fun of mysteries, while also working on our childhood memories of nursery rhymes.

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