Book Review: Red Side Story - Jasper Fforde
Fourteen years ago, I read Fforde's Shades of Grey and my life hasn't been quite the same since. It was a magical tale, almost totally devoid of exposition, building in an fantasy world like no other. Fans have been clamouring for a sequel ever since.
The first few chapters of the sequel do an excellent job of exposition - but this isn't the sort of book you can pick up without having recently read the original. I got a dozen pages into Red Side Story before I realised that I remembered nothing about the original. So I went back to read Shades of Grey. I'm delighted to say it was just as good as I remember - a delirious ride through a messed up world.
The second book is… more of the same. It slowly reveals more of the backstory and its grim origins. It builds to a rather satisfying conclusion. Along the way it gets a little tied-up in its own rules, and makes some weird pop-culture references. But never fails to be brilliantly perplexing in its structured surrealness.
In one my smarter moments I likened our era to someone arriving late to a concert, just as the final chords were hanging in the air.
If you like Fforde's inventive and bizarre worlds, you'll like this. But, I warn you, it really needs you to have read Shades of Grey first.
Verdict |
---|
- Buy the eBook on Amazon Kindle
- Get the paper book from Hive
- Author's homepage
- Publisher's details
- Borrow from your local library
- ISBN: 9781444763690
Sara Joy :happy_pepper: said on front-end.social:
@Edent Fforde 🥰
Have you visited his website and found the extra material?
I only read Shades of Grey for the first time recently and was able to almost roll straight into this sequel, it was ace ❤️
Early Riser was a massive highlight too. Loved it, though his account of writing it on his website sounds like it was really difficult for him.
jmi said on glasgow.social:
@Edent Shades of Grey was such a weird book. My wife raved about it and said I needed to read it, and I just didn't enjoy it... until maybe half way through and it somehow became one of the best books I'd read!
More comments on Mastodon.