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The Big over Easy

The Big over Easy 1

A Nursery Crime

by Jasper Fforde
Paperback
Age range: 18 to null Publication Date: 25/07/2006
1/5 Rating 1 Review

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Welcome to the seedy underbelly of nursery crime. From the New York Times bestselling author of the Thursday Next series comes a rollicking novel--"as if the Marx brothers were let loose in the children's section of a strange bookstore" (USA Today).

"A wonderfully readable riot . . . cleverly plotted, magically overstuffed yet amazingly digestible . . . [for] anyone who wants the thrill of a good crime novel larded with highly literate humor."--The Wall Street Journal

Meet Inspector Jack Spratt, family man and head of Reading's Nursery Crime division. He's investigating the murder of ovoid D-class nursery celebrity Humpty Dumpty, ex-convict and lover of women, found shattered to death beneath a wall in a shabby area of town. Yes, the big egg is down, and all those brittle pieces sitting in the morgue point to foul play.

Spratt and his new partner, Sergeant Mary Mary, search through Humpty's sordid past in hopes of finding the key to his death. Before long, Jack and Mary find themselves immersed in a bizarre case that reaches into the highest echelons of Reading society and business.

ISBN:
9780143037231
9780143037231
Category:
Crime & Mystery
Age range:
18 to null
Format:
Paperback
Publication Date:
25-07-2006
Language:
English
Publisher:
Penguin Publishing Group
Country of origin:
United States
Dimensions (mm):
196.85x129.54x22.86mm
Weight:
0.3kg
Jasper Fforde

Jasper Fforde spent twenty years in the film business before debuting on the New York Times bestseller list with The Eyre Affair in 2001.

Since then he has written another twelve novels, including the Number One Sunday Times bestseller One of our Thursdays is Missing, and the Last Dragonslayer series, adapted for television by Sky. Fforde lives and works in his adopted nation of Wales.

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The Big Over Easy is the first in the Nursery Crime series by Jasper Fforde and, while it was not published until 2005, it was actually written in 1994, well before his highly successful Thursday Next series. It is a reworking of his first written novel which was initially titled Who Killed Humpty Dumpty, and is set in a similar alternative universe to the Thursday Next novels; the main characters, DI Jack Spratt, DS Mary Mary, Dr. Gladys Singh and others appear in The Well of Lost Plots. Spratts boss, Superintendent Briggs tells DS Mary, when she transfers from Basingstoke to Reading Division, hoping to work with the legendary DCI Friedland Chymes: Modern policing isnt about catching criminals, Mary. Its about good copy and ensuring cases can be made into top-notch documentaries on the telly. (not too much of a stretch from real life.). To her disappointment, Mary is assigned to assist DI Jack Spratt in the Nursery Crime Division which deals with any crime involving nursery characters or plots from poems or stories. The NCD team consists of DI Jack Spratt, DS Mary Mary, Sergeant Charlie Baker (the station hypochondriac), Constable Otto Tibbit, Constable the Baroness Gretel Leibnitz von Kandlestyk-Maeker (forensic accounting expert) and Constable Ashley (blue-skinned alien and computer expert), all sharing two tiny rooms since 1978, with welcome input from Dr Gladys Singh (pathologist). The story opens with Spratt and Mary investigating Humpty Dumptys fall from a wall and subsequent death. Fforde gives the reader a truly original plot with lots of mystery contrivances including the Locked Room, Identical Twins, Red Herring, Least Likely Suspect and Overlooked Clue, plenty of irony and some worthy puns, and reminds the reader just how much violence there is in Nursery Rhymes and Fairy Tales. Ffordes main character is happily married to Madeleine with 5 kids & Prometheus as lodger in the spare room, OR a chain-smoking vintage-Rolls-Royce driving divorced alcoholic with an inability to form long-lasting relationships, a love of Puccini, Henry Moore and Magritte (according to his Guild of Detectives application form). Whilst trying to solve the case, Jack is also woven into several other nursery rhymes and tales including, obviously, Jack Spratt, Jack the Giant Killer and Jack and the Beanstalk.

With each Jasper Fforde book, I look forward to the smorgasbord of hilarious, occasionally ludicrous names that Ffordes rich imagination throws up: journalists Joshua Hatchett, Archibald Fatquack, Hector Sleaze and Clifford Sensible; detectives Inspector Moose, Hercule Porridge and Miss Maple from St Michael Mead; Giorgio Porgia, William Winkie, Tom Thomm (the flautists son), Incomprehensible Greene (landscaper), Seymour Weevil, DCI Bestbeloved, Mr & Mrs Sittkomm. Winsum & Loosum Pharmaceuticals, and Spongg footcare. Fforde also treats the reader to occasional gems like: She opened the door..letting out a stream of cats that ran around with such rapidity and randomness of motion that they assumed a liquid state of furry purringness. I found this book thoroughly enjoyable and I look forward to the second in this series, The Fourth Bear.

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