Ashley's Reviews > Shades of Grey

Shades of Grey by Jasper Fforde
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really liked it
bookshelves: anglophilia, class-gender-race, dystopian, humor, satire, speculative, you-wrote-about-what-now, audiobooks, not-reviewed-2024
Read 2 times. Last read June 19, 2015.

May 2024: I wasn't as in to this as I was the first time, mostly bc as it turns out, a lot of the pleasure of it is experiencing for the first time the absolute weirdness of the world that Fforde has created. But my brain is all refreshed, and I'm happy to FINALLY be heading into book two. I have it on my TBR for the fall and am intrigued about what weirdness is in store for me.

June 2015: This was really, really good, and really, really weird.

I’ve been sitting on a hardcover copy of this book for YEARS, waiting for the right time to read it. The long-promised two sequels seemed nowhere in sight, so I figured no harm in waiting. And now that it looks like the second book* is on it’s way for next year at the earliest, 2017 at the latest, I figured it was about time. I am also feeling resentful and wanting to take back the phrase “Shades of Grey” from certain . . . sectors. And what a fresh breath of weirdness it turned out to be.

*WHERE IS MY NEXT NURSERY CRIME BOOK, JASPER. WHERE.

Undoubtedly, Jasper Fforde is a writer of silly books, but with Shades of Grey (subtitled The Road to High Saffron in order to distinguish it from its forthcoming sequels) — which is indeed a very silly book — he’s also got something with some heft to it. This is a satire like his other books, but it’s also a dystopia, which is new territory for him. The Nursery Crime books satirize our culture through fairy-tales, and the Thursday Next books are alt-histories that do the same with stories and a surplus of imagination. But the Shades of Grey series actually has a sheen of realism to it. Mind you, just a sheen. We’re not talking hard-hitting documentary here. This is a world where people use the color green as a narcotic and where spoons are highly prized objects.

It’s also the most joyfully weird dystopia I’ve ever read.

The premise of Shades of Grey, which takes place in Britain an unknown number of centuries from now, is that there was The Something That Happened, and all the people (whom the characters call The Previous) died off, leaving new humans upon the Earth who can now only see one color with their tiny little pupils (which also prevent them from seeing anything at night). Society is segregated by these colors, and certain colors have more prestige than others. Additionally, the more of a color you can see (which is measured upon adulthood with an official test), the higher up within your color you are. Color, or lack thereof, permeates every aspect of their lives. Citizens earn merits that they often use to purchase synthetic colors, and a great deal of time and effort is spent salvaging true color from the wild and turning it in concentrated form into synthetic color (which is fast running out). In addition, the society is rigidly controlled from the top. Citizens who don’t have enough merits are sent to reboot camp. Citizens are told where they will work, and marriages are arranged for optimal color production in children. Technology is also frequently leapt back, seemingly at random (in the book, telephones have only recently been taken away).

But that’s just the background. The real story starts when our main character, Eddie Russett, is sent with his father the Swatchman (a person who heals with color combinations) to a fringe village in order to earn some Humility for a prank he played on another boy. The fringes are very different, and he soon finds himself drawn into questioning for the first time why his world is the way it is.

Most dystopian novels are endlessly bleak, but sometimes that level of bleakness gets old and actually works against the message the author is trying to impart. And certainly, Fforde sticks some disturbing stuff in here amidst all the humorous oddities. But it’s precisely that level of absurdity that makes the satire so effective. The society these people live in is structured in such a ridiculous manner, but has just enough similarities to our own, that the absurdity of some of our own behavior is easily reflected in it. (It also helps that you don’t come out of the book wanting to smack your own head against a wall in despair.)

Eddie and Jane, the grey girl he quickly falls in love with, are definitely the absurdo-world version of Winston and Julia from 1984, but for me that only adds to the book’s charm. The dynamic between the haplessly naïve Eddie and the seemingly caustic, rebellious Jane was my favorite part of the book. In fact, this whole book could be called the absurdo-world 1984, and that wouldn’t be an insult to either book.

My only real complaint is that the plot takes a while to get going, because Fforde has to set up the world, which he does set up pretty organically. There isn’t really any exposition. But it does seem for about 100 pages or so that things we’re learning are just set decoration, although it turns out that almost all of it is relevant to the plot. This won’t ever be an issue for me on re-read, but it definitely was before I knew how it would all turn out.

If you haven’t tried Jasper Fforde’s writing before, I would highly recommend this as a starting point. It’s probably his most mature and well-written book, even if it’s not his funniest*. If you’ve read Fforde before and found him lacking, you might still like this because it’s of a different flavor than what you’re used to.

*It’s still pretty fucking funny, though.

And now I really do hope that the internet isn’t lying to me when it says book two will be out next year because I really want it.*

*AND THE THIRD NURSERY CRIME BOOK, JASPER. WHERE IS IT.
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Reading Progress

Finished Reading
April 14, 2009 – Shelved
June 12, 2015 –
7.0% "Okay, Jasper Fforde, I will buy into your wacky premise, but I do have some questions that I hope you eventually answer. Like, if people can't see colors, then what exactly are "synthetic" colors? If something looks green, it's green! How is that "synthetic?" I will potentially buy your answer, but I just really need to know."
June 13, 2015 –
13.0% ""They regulated everything we did, and had brought peace to the Collective for nearly four centuries. They were sometimes very odd indeed: The banning of the number that lay between 72 and 74 was a case in point, and no one had every fully explained why it was forbidden to count sheep, make any new spoons or use acronyms."

Weirdest dystopia ever."
June 16, 2015 –
15.0% "I have never read a Jasper Fforde novel this slowly before. What's going on?"
June 17, 2015 –
26.0% "Hopefully all the set-up is over so we can actually get going on the plot here."
June 18, 2015 –
44.0% "So they call the major event that changed the world the 'Something Happened.' But what could *possibly* have Happened to make ball lightning, swans, and pookas the main things to be scared of. Not to mention the whole people can only see one color thing. And can't see in the dark, because of how small their pupils are. Jasper Fforde is so weird, you guys. I love it."
June 18, 2015 –
52.0% "I love the Apocryphal Man. He is brilliant. And so very naked. And the part where he gets so sad that he's not actually invisible made me laugh so hard."
June 18, 2015 –
64.0% ""Okay, this is the wisdom. First, time spent on reconnaissanse is never wasted. Second, almost anything can be improved with the addition of bacon. And finally, there is no problem on Earth that can't be ameliorated by a hot bath and a cup of tea.”"
Started Reading
June 19, 2015 –
77.0% "This is getting really good, so of course I have to stop reading it and go to work."
June 19, 2015 –
83.0% "There is not enough book left for all the stuff I still want to know."
June 19, 2015 –
100.0% "Holy CRAP that ENDING."
June 19, 2015 – Shelved as: anglophilia
June 19, 2015 – Shelved as: class-gender-race
June 19, 2015 – Shelved as: dystopian
June 19, 2015 – Shelved as: humor
June 19, 2015 – Shelved as: satire
June 19, 2015 – Shelved as: speculative
June 19, 2015 – Shelved as: you-wrote-about-what-now
June 19, 2015 – Finished Reading
May 27, 2024 – Shelved as: audiobooks
May 27, 2024 –
9.0% "Re-reading in prep for the sequel, which FINALLY came out. It's only been fifteen years."
May 28, 2024 –
20.0% "The most nonsensical dystopian book ever written."
May 28, 2024 – Shelved as: not-reviewed-2024

Comments Showing 1-4 of 4 (4 new)

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message 1: by Joe (new)

Joe Ehhh ... when was this published? Any book that makes me think this hard whether it has any involvement with E.L. James probably needed a different title?


Ashley 2009. Way before.


message 3: by Joe (new)

Joe I bet Fforde was just happy as a lark when he heard about Fifty Shades of Grey.


Ashley Yeah, she's totally ruined that phrase.


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