The Thinking Woman's Guide to Real Magic
Book
The Thinking Woman's Guide to Real Magic is a sparkling romantic adventure. When Nora Fischer...
Real Cricket™ 17
Games and Sports
App
Real Cricket™ is here and here to stay! We have migrated to a brand new experience with Real...
The Real Food Whole Health Podcast: Food, Travel, Natural Health, Self-Care
Podcast
The Real Food Whole Health Podcast is all about real food and holistic health in the real world....
saheffernan (157 KP) rated A Girl Called Shameless in Books
Feb 1, 2020
Sex and Happiness – Laurie Handlers
Podcast
Dive into a world where amazing sex is just around the corner and happiness is available to...
Weather Radar, Forecast &Alert
Weather and Lifestyle
App
Provides accurate real-time weather, hourly & daily weather forecast and weather details. Real-time...
The Chocolate Lady (94 KP) rated The Alice Network in Books
Oct 5, 2020
Eagle Live-video chat&stream
Social Networking
App
Eagle Live is your live stream platform. You can broadcast your life to the world as it happens -...
Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Freefall
Joss Whedon and Andrew Chambliss
Book
Season 8 ended with a bang that cut the world off from magic—culminating in another set of...
Phil Leader (619 KP) rated Something Rotten (Thursday Next, #4) in Books
Nov 26, 2019
Thursday, along with her young child Friday, decides it is time to leave the Bookworld behind and return to the real world, despite the danger this poses from the all powerful Goliath corporation. They have already erased her husband from existence and wanted to do the same to her. But Goliath are now benign and repentant. But that doesn't mean that Thursday can have a happy ending. Not only does she need to get her husband back, but unless Swindon can win the Superhoop croquet world cup there will be an unstoppable chain of events leading to the end of the world.
As usual with Fforde the plot is complex, convoluted and wildly improbable but that doesn't stop him pulling the reader into the slightly off-kilter world of the Nexts. As could be expected the humour is packed in tight. Literary jokes, in world jokes, real world jokes. Playing with language and words in every inventive way possible. All of these are his stock in trade and he uses them to great effect here.
This was for me a little weaker than the first three books, possibly because now back in Thursday's world is a little more mundane than seeing works of literature from the inside but there are still plenty of laughs to be had and the various plot strands will keep you guessing