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Paperback The Fourth Bear Book

ISBN: 0143038923

ISBN13: 9780143038924

The Fourth Bear

(Book #2 in the Nursery Crime Series)

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER - Enter the seedy underbelly of nursery crime, where characters are never as they seem, in this "brilliantly, breathlessly odd" (USA Today) novel from the renowned author of The Big Over Easy and the Thursday Next series.

"Like the best novels of Douglas Adams or Terry Pratchett, Fforde goes beyond his genre."--Los Angeles Times Book Review

"Jasper Fforde is able...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Laugh-out-loud funny... without ever becoming dumb

It's very hard for any author to be funny, and to stay funny for the length of a whole novel... much less for an ongoing series. Fforde achieves it by always having a clear sense of where he's going, even when the plot appears to have as little structure as a Marx Brothers movie or a Monty Python skit. Or, should I say, as little *apparent* structure. The plots may be a little on the strange side -- we're talking here about a storyline based on the search for Goldilocks, which encompasses competitive cucumbers, the secret morals of the Easter Bunny, porridge allotments for bears, and a space alien who talks in binary -- but the characters become real people (or, uh, bears). You care about them, and before you know it, you _really_ want to know who is behind all of the intertwined events. But mostly, Fforde is extremely funny. He never descends into dumbness or predictability, and just when you think he's set you up for one verbal pratfall, he takes the story in a wholly unexpected direction. You *could* read this book without first reading the first in the Nursery Crime series; the story does stand on its own. However, I think you'll enjoy this one more if you read the earlier book first. In either case, though -- this is a marvelous romp. Highly recommended for carbon-based life forms who wish a reason to laugh.

Ffabulos Fforde!

Jasper Fforde at his best, in this second installment in the quirky and offbeat adventures of DCI Jack Spratt, Mary Mary and Ashley. Facing a physopatic Gingerbreadman with murder and gore on his mind, a suspension from his job (again!) and doubts as to his own reality, Jack must prove to the whole Nursery community that his department is worth the money. And then there is Goldilock and the three bears. How exactly did the porridge managa to defy physics by cooling so eratically? Just who else was privy to the disaperance of the finicky Goldilocks? Beware: this book is contagiously exciting, and may just get you interested in...cucumbers!

That's the way the gingerbread crumbles

Who'd have thought that those old nursery rhymes and fairy tales would have had so much going on behind the scenes? Fresh from their largely forgotten triumphs in "The Big Over Easy", Jack Spratt, Mary Mary and the rest of the Nursery Crime Division find themselves faced with new challenges. The psychopathic killer known as the Gingerbread Man is loose, and true to his legend, he runs as fast as he can and you just can't catch him. Added to that, prize cucumbers are disappearing, mysterious explosions are vaporising chucks of real estate, Goldilocks is missing, and relationships with the bears are about to boil over due to porridge control issues. Officially, Jack is off the case and in disgrace, and although Mary Mary takes over for a while, she is also busted on an overexposure charge. The Gingerbread Man case is given to David Copperfield, and there are no great expectations for solving it, but then again, you can't keep a good fictional character down for long. If you thought that the DaVinci Code was startling, there are also many revelations in this book - a must-read if you want to know why the three bowls of porridge were at different temperatures, if gingerbread is a cake or a cookie, and why deals from used car salesmen are often too good to be true. Amanda Richards, August 20, 2006

Witty mayhem and murder among the Nursery Rhymes

If you've already read any of Jason Fforde's novels, you'll know (well, roughly) what to expect - witty turns of phrase, intriguing characters that are probably not quite sane, the concept of literary characters having a corporeality that makes them virtually as real as anyone else, tricky situations out of which the characters leap from one bizarre plot resolution to another (Jason Fforde actually numbers the possible plot devices used, and it works beautifully), and more in-jokes (nursery-rhyme related in this case) than would fit in a pie, even an extra-large pie. Those who delight in witty literary puns will love Mr Fforde's style, as will devotees of Terry Pratchett's novels. There's something delightfully manic about the style here, and I was reminded occasionally of Lewis Carroll in the writing. Briefly: Jack Spratt, detective in charge of the Nursery Crime Division (dealing with all crimes that are related to PDRs - Persons of Dubious Reality, such as characters from nursery rhymes, etc.) is not basking for long in the glow of success after having discovered the murderer of Humpty Dumpty (see The Big Over-Easy). His popularity in the press plummets down after his division fails to prevent the wolf from swallowing Granny and Little Red Riding Hood, and Jack's shunted off for an enforced "rest" period (with his sanity called into question) when the evil and sadistic psychotic murderer The Gingerbread Man escapes from the asylum. But Jack won't let a little thing like that stop him. He and Mary Mary, along with the trusty help of binary-speaking alien, Ashley, are determined to pull a plot device and make Briggs (Jack's superior) look like an idiot by solving the case themselves. It's all to do with bears - and a missing journalist named Goldilocks - and an unexpected Swiftian secret that lies beneath the growing of super cucumbers. Oh, and Jack's newly purchased car, which seems to repair itself and whose odometer is running BACKWARDS... It's all great fun and genuinely well plotted. I admit my review is biased - I've become addicted to Jason Fforde's novels.

Why *were* those bears sleeping apart, anyway?

Nursery Crimes detective Jack Spratt is back on the case in The Fourth Bear, and it's a much better book than the first one (The Big Over Easy). I really enjoyed the first book, but found myself not laughing as much as I would have liked. The second, however, solves that problem. There were many instances where I laughed for a while, enjoying Fforde's turn of phrase or a new concept. Virtually every one of my complaints from the first book disappeared as Fforde appears to have dropped them, or at least sidelined them. And the end of the book is even better, with the announcement that not only is Jack Spratt returning, but a new Thursday Next novel is coming out next year too! The glory from Detective Spratt's solving of the Humpty Dumpty murder doesn't last long, especially after a series of mishaps in subsequent cases, such as the Red Riding Hood case, where unfortunately a few people were eaten by the wolf before the case was solved. But Spratt has more important things to worry about now. The sinister psychopath, The Gingerbread Man, has escaped from the mental asylum that Jack put him into twenty years ago, and he's going on a rampage. But Jack's not in charge of the investigation, having been ordered to take a psych evaluation. Instead, he follows up on the death of a reporter named Goldilocks, a friend to the huge bear population living in the area. After a gruesome discovery, Spratt and his partner, Mary Mary, move to uncover a sinister plot that may go extremely high up. But why does Jack keep happening upon the Gingerbread Man, and why does he leave Jack alive every time? Is he a cookie or a cake? And what do the intricacies of bear society, the illegal trafficking in black market porridge, and a theme park based on the Battle of the Somme have to do with each other? Jack may not survive to find out. Fforde demonstrates his mastery of the absurd in The Fourth Bear, piling on the situations and incorporating multiple nursery rhymes and children's stories into an intricate tapestry that holds together remarkably well. He also moves the characters forward, dispensing with situations that were already dealt with in The Big Over Easy. Friedland Chymes, Jack's rival on the force, is gone (I figured he'd be back for the second novel). There is hardly a mention of the "the more famous and published a detective you are, the more likely you are to get a guilty verdict" idea that was prominent in the first book. These omissions strengthen the book, as the inclusion of either one would have dragged it down a bit. The publication idea was amusing throughout the first book, but I think that concept was worn out. So what does The Fourth Bear have going for it? It still has the strong characterization of all the regulars. Jack is a very interesting character, quick of wit, slightly insane (you'd have to be to deal with the types of crimes the Nursery Crimes division does), and he has a few personal problems to deal with as well.
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