Something Rotten

Unabridged
Author: Jasper Fforde
Narrator: Emily Gray
Genres: Fiction, Mystery, Thriller
Publisher: Recorded Books
Date: August 2004
Length: 12 hours, 45 minutes
Ratings:
Formats:
  • CD

Overview

The popularity of Jasper Fforde’s one-of-a-kind series builds with each new book. Now in the fourth installment, the resourceful literary detective Thursday Next returns to Swindon from the BookWorld accompanied by her son Friday and none other than the dithering Hamlet. But returning to SpecOps is no snap—as outlaw fictioner Yorrick Kaine plots for absolute power, the return of Swindon’s patron saint foretells doom, and, if that isn’t bad enough, The Merry Wives of Windsor is becoming entangled with Hamlet. Can Thursday find a Shakespeare clone to stop this hostile takeover? Can she vanquish Kaine and prevent the world from plunging into war? And will she ever find reliable child care? Find out in this totally original, action-packed romp, sure to be another escapist thrill for Jasper Fforde’s legions of fans.

Reviews (2)

Not As Fun

Written by Anonymous on January 31st, 2007

  • Book Rating: 3/5

Weakest so far of the series. Well read, but the story movement is very disjointed. Still fun, just not up to the level of the others in the series.

loved it loved it. I am getting everyone I know to listen to it.

Written by Anonymous on September 6th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 5/5

The first track. The list of characters in the book will hook you. The imagination is so vast. I signed up for this website because I couldn't get the rest of Fforde's books at the library. I read this book first. I think it is the last but I enjoyed it so much. Can't wait for the others. Thursday Next is so calm and accepting of people and situations. It makes me want to be that calm and collected in the face of certain danger. I thought about this book long after I was finished. good sign.

Author Details

Author Details

Fforde, Jasper

"Jasper Fforde worked in the film industry for 13 years where his varied career included the role of ""focus puller"" on films such as Goldeneye, The Mask of Zorro and Entrapment. He had been writing purely for his own amusement for several years, but always harboured a dream of trading in his film career to become a full time writer.

After receiving 76 rejection letters from publishers, Jasper's first novel The Eyre Affair was taken on by Hodder & Stoughton and published in July 2001. Set in 1985 in a world that is similar to our own, but with a few crucial - and bizarre - differences (Wales is a socialist republic, the Crimean War is still ongoing and the most popular pets are home-cloned dodos), The Eyre Affair introduces a remarkable heroine, a literary detective named Thursday Next. Thursday's job includes spotting forgeries of Shakespeare's lost plays, mending holes in narrative plotlines, and rescuing characters who have been kidnapped from literary masterpieces.

The publication of The Eyre Affair started a 'book phenomenon', in which readers were catapulted in and out of truth and imagination. The novel garnered dozens of effusive reviews, and received high praise from the press, from booksellers and readers throughout the UK. The number of reprints have now reached double figures, and first editions are traded on ebay for hundreds of pounds. In the US The Eyre Affair was also an instant hit, entering the New York Times Bestseller List in its first week of publication. In addition to achieving impressive sales figures in the US, Jasper was also named in Entertainment Weekly (the bible for all media news in the US) as one of the members of its 'It' list for 2002 - alongside the likes of Philip Pullman, Anna Patchett, Stephen Carter, Ian McEwan and Eminem.

Jasper's second novel Lost in a Good Book was published in the UK in July 2002 and it has built on the amazing success of The Eyre Affair. The Sunday Times described him as ""this year's grown up JK Rowling"" and both books just keep on selling - their combined sales have now topped 140,000 copies. Jasper's eagerly awaited third novel in the Thursday Next series, called The Well of Lost Plots, was published in the UK in July 2003 and in the USA in February 2004. The fourth book in the series, Something Rotten, will be released internationally on August 9th, 2004.

Jasper lives and writes in Wales and has a passion for aviation."