Sleep Songs for Kids - Calming Baby Lullaby Collection with Relaxing Sounds & White Noise
Entertainment
App
If your child will not sleep and it's time for bed, it's not a problem anymore! Here's a brand new...
A Miscellany for Garden-Lovers: Facts and Folklore Through the Ages
David Squire and David R. Squire
Book
Gardening is an age-old craft, steeped in mystique and peppered with handed-down wisdom, often...
Hello You, Hello Me: A Soft Daytime Book with Mirrors
Book
The family-run Wee Gallery creators know that newborn babies love high-contrast images and respond...
My Hat and All That
Book
In my pocket, feeling round, what can this be that I've found? Pull it out to see and - oooh! Look:...
13 Fairy Negro Tales
Book
The second in the ground-breaking mouthmark series, 13 Fairy Negro Tales is a vibrant pamphlet of...
Phil Leader (619 KP) rated The Big Over Easy (Nursery Crime, #1) in Books
Nov 8, 2019
Investigated by detective Jack Spratt (usefully the name Jack is quite common in nursery rhymes) and his new partner Mary Mary we meet a number of characters from nursery rhymes, songs and myth and legend. As the body count rises Jack and Mary must do what all the king's horses and all the king's men couldn't, and assemble the pieces of Humpty's demise to find the culprit.
The world Fforde creates - a fictional version of the town of Reading (and strongly implied to be the same world that Thursday Next lives in, in the book-within-a-book Caversham Heights) works suprisingly well, perhaps because other than the traits inherited from their nursery rhymes the characters are otherwise conventional. So Jack can't eat any fat and is destined to sell something for beans, but at the core is a straightforward detective.
This contrasts with, say, The Hollow Chocolate Bunnies of the Apocalypse by Robert Rankin which again is a detective story populated with nursery rhyme characters (and poor Humpty is again a victim, but in a very different murder) where the setting is in Toyland so doesn't have the grounding of reality that The Big Over Easy does.
The plot itself is very complex - there are red herrings, theories and suspects galore - and Fforde enjoys playing with the reader as much as with Jack. And there is of course humour aplenty, both simple gags from the story and characters and also some good knowing winks to the reader when events mirror the characters' nursery rhymes. Above all Fforde never forgets that this is after all a detective novel.
Probably not quite as good as the Thursday Next books but definitely a good read and will entertain from the first to the last page.
The Word Rhythm Dictionary: A Resource for Writers, Rappers, Poets, and Lyricists
Book
The Word Rhythm Dictionary: A Resource for Writers, Rappers, Poets, and Lyricists is a new kind of...
YANKAI'S TRIANGLE
Games
App
"Triangle ... Triangle ... Triangle" 5/5 - Touch Arcade YANKAI'S TRIANGLE is a love letter to...
Shaft (2000)
Movie Watch
Crooked cops on the take -- small-time drug lords -- sleazy informers and sadistic rich kids ready...