Saturday, June 15, 2019
Weekly Reader Thursday Next Edition: The Well of Lost Plots (Thursday Next Series Vol.III) by Jasper Fforde; Thursday Takes A Literary Journey Further Into The Fascinating Book World
Weekly Reader Thursday Next Edition: The Well of Lost Plots (The Thursday Next Series Vol. III) by Jasper Fforde; Thursday Takes A Literary Journey Further Into the Fascinating Book World
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews
Spoilers: When last we left Thursday Next in Lost in a Good Book, her husband Landen had been eradicated, while she is pregnant with his child, had been screwed over by the Goliath Corporation, and had several enemies on her tail including Aornis Hades, the bitchy magical sister of Acheron Hades, her arch enemy. What's a girl to do? Why enter the Great Library of Book World and go into hiding inside the pages of an unpublished murder mystery novel of course!
The Well of Lost Plot's main storyline is somewhat convoluted. It continues plot threads from Lost in a Good Book such as Thursday's psychic encounters with Aornis and the machinations of Yorrik Kaine, an escapee from Book World who now plays the role of corrupt politician in England. There are also murder attempts on various Jurisfiction agents including Thursday and her handler, Miss Havisham. Some sinister characters such as the Minotaur from Greek mythology and Big Martin from the horror story “Better Wait Until Big Martin Comes,” are lurking about causing trouble. Thursday has to face her second trial for Fiction Infraction inside the pages of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and where the heck is Godot and why are we waiting for him?
The biggest draw in this book is not the plot but the journey into Book World itself as Thursday learns what it's like to be a literary character. (Well a literary character in her world or more of a literary character than she already is. Never mind, just go with it!) Thursday is inside a hoary clichéd murder mystery called Caversham Heights replacing the character of Mary Jones, sidekick to Jack Spratt, detective extraordinaire. In the Book World, literary characters can take sanctioned breaks either inside other books or out in the real world, called the Outland, as long as someone else replaces them. When they get a replacement, the plot can continue as normal and the Reader is none the wiser that any change has been made. (If they leave their book without permission, that results in Page Running and is therefore illegal.)
Getting published is the most important goal for any literary character. Caversham Heights is waiting inside the Well of Lost Plots, a depository for unpublished books waiting to fly into Reader's hands. Besides the books themselves, the Well is filled with construction workers who build plots, characters, and settings and shop that sell words and plot devices. (Thursday receives A Shot in the Dark plot device which comes in handy later.) There is also the dreaded Text Sea which is just letters made from destroyed master copies of unpublished works which the gang from Caversham Heights are in fear of getting thrown in.
Besides the unique world, Fforde gives us the limitations of the lives of literary characters and how they get bored doing the same things over and over. They are mystified by Thursday’s arrival and keep asking questions about the Outland like why Outlanders drive on parkways and park on driveways. Thursday struggles through life as a literary character by doing without certain things that aren't important to the text, such as having breakfast and being surrounded by the bizarre denizens like faceless extras with no back story inside the books.
There are characters that go through great lengths to change their storylines such as in a creepy chapter in which the extras of Shadow the Sheepdog are willing to stage Thursday's murder to get an emotional high.
As always Fforde handles his and other author's characters well. In this volume, he takes great fun in making characters act differently than they do in their original works. Lucy Deane, the goody-two-shoes from Mill on the Floss becomes a gun-wielding psychopath to destroy her rival, Floss’ heroine, Maggie Tulliver. Miss Havisham and Thursday host a support group for Wuthering Heights characters who have grudges against Heathcliff (which is everyone except Catherine Earnshaw), while Heathcliff behaves like an aging womanizing rock star. Uriah Heep, David Copperfield's villain is originally Uriah Hope, a genial, sweet guy until a misspelling goes awry and turns him into the sniveling sycophant Dickens's readers know and despise.
Of course Fforde's original characters are on hand as well. Thursday shows the same feistiness and determination as she always does, particularly in her mental battles with Aornis Hades as she struggles to hold onto her memories of the eradicated Landen and fight her enemy.
The characters from Caversham Heights are an intriguing bunch as they go through the motions of a plot they know isn't working. When Thursday makes suggestions to shake things up such as Jack patch things up with his wife (instead of doing the whole 'tortured single detective’ thing), they are confused but they are willing to do so to save their home.
The most interesting original characters are a pair of Generics (background characters that have no real purpose or story), named ibb and obb. It's entertaining as Thursday teaches them about humanity using traits like sarcasm or subtext. The Generics ultimately evolve into fleshed out characters, the curvaceous beauty, Lola and the pretentious brainy, Randolph.
Interesting details pile up about the Book World. Characters talk on footnoterphones which are one-on-one conversations found in, where else, the footnotes. They can travel from book to book either by reading the pages or slipping in through the bar codes. Terms like TravelBook (information guide for Jurisfiction agents) and Echolocator (an artisan who destroys echoed words) are thrown around but thankfully are given epitaphs before each chapter to explain them.
A new interactive device called Ultra Word is created which will make reading more interesting by inserting music, scents, and visuals along with the words.
There is even an awards ceremony called the Bookies in which various literary characters receive awards like “Most Troubled Male Lead” and “Dopiest Lead Shakespeare Character.” In true action-adventure format, it is at the Bookies, in front of the entire Book World, where Thursday and her friends confront their enemies and solve the mystery with every literary character watching.
The Well of Lost Plots is a brilliant piece of metafictional writing. It makes every book lover long to schedule a holiday inside its pages.
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