The Woman Who Died a Lot

, #7

Hardcover, 366 pages

English language

Published Nov. 13, 2012 by Viking.

ISBN:
978-0-670-02502-2
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The Bookworld's leading enforcement officer, Thursday Next, has been forced into semiretirement following an assassination attempt. When Thursday's former SpecOps division is reinstated, she assumes she's the obvious choice to lead the Literary Detectives. But our banged-up heroine is no spring chicken, and her old boss has a cushier job in mind for her: chief librarian of the Swindon All-You- Can-Eat at Fatso's Drink Not Included Library. But where Thursday goes, trouble follows ... (Bestseller).

5 editions

reviewed The Woman Who Died a Lot by Jasper Fforde (Thursday Next, #7)

Removes any questions if Fforde is a communist.

And yet, a five star from me.

Is he naive and too fascinated by russia? Yes, but so are most westerners.

Can I certainly say that he read das kapital / communist manifesto? No. But then again, even those who did in the west don't have a lived experience of communism, so I empathise with them falling for barely grounded populism.

And even yet it's a great book! Perhaps the best in the series. It's weird at every corner, includes scrupulous worldbuilding and a ton of calculations. And while we may have the opposite ideas about marxism, we do share unapologetic and relentless sense of anticapitalism. Which, under western labels makes me an intersectional communist, I guess, but western labels can sod off!

Anyway, the book is FUN. The characters are WEIRD. Fforde is an amazing writer.

If you crave Douglas Adams, but ran out, …

Subjects

  • Books and reading
  • Thursday Next (Fictitious character)
  • Literary historians
  • Characters and characteristics in literature
  • Women detectives
  • Fiction

Places

  • England