Shades of Grey

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
JOE? Who's Joe?

Apart We Are Together.

A Science Fiction literary series, created by Jasper Fforde.

Over seven hundred years into the future, following a vague Something That Happened, the country of Chromatacia lies where Britain does today. The human race has transformed into an androgynous-looking race of people with very small pupils that can see one and only one color, all others appearing as shades of grey. Your social standing depends entirely on the one color you can see; those who see purple belong in the aristocracy, whereas those who see red are the working class. Achromatics, or "Greys", cannot see any color at all, and thus they're little more than slaves. These humans share the world with many species of giant, mutant creatures, including killer trees. Most oddly, every living creature has a barcode pattern growing naturally somewhere on their bodies. The entire country is run in the manner of a British boarding school, to the point where a person's worth is measured on how many merits they have.

Our protagonist is Eddie Russett, a young man and member of the House of Red. As punishment for having humiliated a prefect's son, he is banished to the village of East Carmine for a month of menial labor, along with his father, who is sent to replace the village's recently-deceased medical practicioner. After making himself at home and meeting the quirky locals, he falls head-over-heels for a feisty Achromatic named Jane, whose violent temper is as rare in Chromatacia as is the shape of her nose. Smitten, Eddie begins to stalk her, and in doing so he accidentally stumbles on an incredible secret, one that will rock their world to its foundation. Together, for better or worse, Eddie and Jane become the seeds of a revolution...

Not to be confused with the Web Comic or Interactive Fiction of the same name. Also, avoid confusing it with the BDSM novel Fifty Shades of Grey. Let's leave it at that.


The following tropes are common to many or all entries in the Shades of Grey franchise.
For tropes specific to individual installments, visit their respective work pages.
  • Abhorrent Admirer - Violet deMauve, first for Doug, then for Eddie.
  • After the End
  • Ambiguous Gender - The citizens of Chromatacia are implied to be this, including Eddie. At least when compared to The Previous (us).
  • Author Appeal The barcodes. No really.
  • And Man Grew Proud - The book's setting is in a post-'Something That Happened' England where the culture is based around a book of English boarding school rules.
  • Arranged Marriage - Eddie to Constance Oxblood, then to Violet deMauve.
  • Berserk Button - Don't talk about Jane's nose. Call it retrousse and you die.
  • Bittersweet Ending - Sure, Eddie is going to be Red prefect and has a chance of getting into National Color, but he and Jane can't get married because she's Green, so he has to marry Violet and poor Dorian and Imogen got sent to High Saffron, where they will probably die horrible deaths.
  • Brown Note - Redlax and Lincoln.
    • A whole lot of other hues too. The main job of a swatchmen (read: doctor) is to show people certain swatches of colour to get an appropriate physical reaction.
  • Chekhov's Gun - As noted elsewhere, each chapter begins with a quote from what are presumably the rules of Munsell. Most of them don't appear to have any greater significant, but one of the earlier chapters foreshadows part of the ending, namely Jane and Eddie being incompatible because they are complementary colours.
  • Color Coded for Your Convenience - Chromaticia's entire social structure.
  • Color-Coded Patrician - What color people can see defines their social standing; Purples command the most respect. Wealthy people may choose to artificially dye their clothes so all can see it - a practice which the main character calls "a proudfully expensive and tastelessly ostentatious display."
  • Double Standard Rape (Female on Male) - Violet on Eddie. The fact that Eddie's own dad set it up just adds insult to injury.
  • Downer Ending - Bloody hell. Eddie can't marry Jane because it turns out she's Green; People sent for reboot end up dead from the Mildew in High Saffron; Mildew isn't a natural disease, it's a colour used to take care of certain undesirable sectors of society by Head Office. See also Complete Monster.
  • Encyclopedia Exposita - Each chapter opens with a quote from the rules.
  • G-Rated Drug - Specific colors have this effect on the citizenry, including Lincoln.
  • How We Got Here - The book starts with Eddie inside a Yateveo. The first 9/10ths of the book are explaining how he ended up in such a pickle.
  • I Wish It Was Real - Perpetulite, a material used to build roads. Technically alive, it shifts to push obstacles out of the way and survives by absorbing nutrients from any organic debris that may fall on it, including dead leaves, weeds, roadkill, and people essentially eliminating the need for any road maintenance. It was developed by the Previous long before the start of the novel, and the technology used to create it has been lost to time.
  • Loophole Abuse - How a surprising amount of things are accomplished in Chromatacia, really. Stuck between the inviolable rules and the need for certain things to get done (things usually required by other rules), loopholery has become a proud tradition.
  • Lovable Rogue - Tommo Cinnabar. A snitch, drug addict, and all-around ne'er-do-well with a Money Fetish, but a charming and likeable one nonetheless.
  • Luke, I Am Your Father - Inverted
  • Make It Look Like an Accident
  • Man-Eating Plant - The Yateveo.
  • Meaningful Name - Family names suggest the colors they can see: the Russetts, a Red family; the deMauves, a Purple family; Gamboge, the Yellow prefect; etc.
  • No Celebrities Were Harmed - Legends of the Previous, such as M'Donna and Chuck Naurice.
  • Our Founder - Both East Carmine and High Saffron have a twice-life size statue of Our Munsell in the town square.
  • Really Four Hundred And Fifty One Years Old - The Apocryphal man.
  • Released to Elsewhere - Rebooted.
  • Scannable Man: Barcodes. They're everywhere.
  • Scavenger World
  • Sequel Hook
  • Shout-Out - One of Eddie Russett's friends is named Floyd Pinken.
    • Prefect Yewberry warns Eddie and his father about Pookas in Rusty Hill, saying they've appeared here and there, now and then, to this one and that one.
    • When Eddie is Zane's house in Rusty Hill, there's a television playing 'Raiders of the Lost Ark.
    • The Oz Memorial and all the works of art.
    • Most characters have last names relating to their colors, however grays are only referred to as G-(insert number here). So we end up having a character Zane the Grey. Jane is arguably an allusion to the same.
    • Subtler than the others, but throughout Eddie refers to the Ishihara, the test all citizens take in order to have their colour perception levels certified. In real life, the Ishihara test is used for a similar purpose - to test colour-blindness, rather than colour-perception. (This troper is red-green colourblind. He's had more than a few Ishiharas)
  • Star-Crossed Lovers - Eddie and Jane. At first due to different social standing, and the fact she keeps threatening to kill him, later due to him being a very strong Red and her being a very weak Green, and complementary colors must never mate.
  • Stealth Pun - One of the minor characters is a photographer who can only see grey and is called Dorian. Hmmm...
    • In fact, all of the Greys are stealth puns. Unlike other characters, they aren't given last names that are actual color shades, instead being G-17 or G-24 etc. So in addition to Dorian Gray we have Jane Grey, Zane Grey...
      • But no Jean?
        • It's only the first one, so I'm sure she'll show up eventually.
    • Not to mention the love story between Edward and Jane.
  • Suspiciously Specific Denial - "There's no such thing as pookas. It says so in the rules."
  • Take a Number - Eddie sets one up in his father's office.
  • Tsundere - Jane. Very much so.
  • Unperson - Apocryphals would be... if they existed, which they don't.
  • Unusual Euphemism - You know (sex) and thingying (masturbation)
  • When Trees Attack - The Yateveo.