Showing posts with label Clockwork Century. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clockwork Century. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 3, 2015

New Releases 2/3/15

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Hardcovers

Jacaranda: A Novella of the Clockwork Century by Cherie Priest

The Ranger

On the island of Galveston, off the coast of southeast Texas, lies a hotel called the Jacaranda. In its single year of operation, two dozen people have died there. The locals say it's cursed. The Rangers say that's nonsense, but they know a man who might be willing to investigate. Horatio Korman crosses the water from the mainland, and hopes for the best.

The Nun

But the bodies pile up, and a hurricane is brewing up fast. One of the Jacaranda's guests sees time running out, so she seeks an authority of a different sort: a priest from El Huizache who is good at solving problems and keeping secrets. Eileen Callahan has a problem to solve, and a secret to keep. She crosses her fingers, and sends a message that could save them all.

The Padre

Juan Miguel Quintero Rios broke a promise to the Virgin, and so he was punished...but his intentions were pure, so he was also blessed. Now he walks the southwest with second sight and a tattoo across his back: ''Deo, non Fortuna''--By God, not chance. The former gunslinger crosses himself, and makes for the Jacaranda Hotel.

Karen Memory by Elizabeth Bear

“You ain’t gonna like what I have to tell you, but I'm gonna tell you anyway. See, my name is Karen Memery, like memory only spelt with an e, and I'm one of the girls what works in the Hôtel Mon Cherie on Amity Street. Hôtel has a little hat over the o like that. It's French, so Beatrice tells me.”

Set in the late 19th century—when the city we now call Seattle Underground was the whole town (and still on the surface), when airships plied the trade routes, would-be gold miners were heading to the gold fields of Alaska, and steam-powered mechanicals stalked the waterfront, Karen is a young woman on her own, is making the best of her orphaned state by working in Madame Damnable’s high-quality bordello. Through Karen’s eyes we get to know the other girls in the house—a resourceful group—and the poor and the powerful of the town. Trouble erupts one night when a badly injured girl arrives at their door, beggin sanctuary, followed by the man who holds her indenture, and who has a machine that can take over anyone’s mind and control their actions.  And as if that wasn’t bad enough, the next night brings a body dumped in their rubbish heap—a streetwalker who has been brutally murdered.

Bear brings alive this Jack-the-Ripper yarn of the old west with a light touch in Karen’s own memorable voice, and a mesmerizing evocation of classic steam-powered science.

Traveling With Your Octopus by Brian Kesinger

A lavishly illustrated Victorian era travelogue chronicling the international journeys of Octo-Victorian globetrotters Victoria Prismall and her pet land octopus Otto, this scenic follow-up to Brian Kesinger's instant classic Walking Your Octopus is sure to delight all manner of world adventurers. Thirty panoramic, full-page illustrations showcase Victoria and Otto as they explore destinations in Scotland, France, Holland, Spain, Austria, Romania, Italy, Russia, China, Japan, Thailand, New Zealand, Mexico, and beyond. From snowy Himalayan peaks to lush Amazon rain forests… from the tombs of the Pharaohs to the depths of the oceans... from the beaches of the Caribbean, to the plains of the American west… see it all from the comfort of your favorite reading spot. The book's art is both beautiful and captivating, with each illustration telling its own visual story about the whimsical characters and their fun-filled situations. As with Walking Your Octopus, this book is collectible art-object for those who still value the classic elegance of ink-on-paper. The hardcover binding is plussed with two-layer embossing and spot varnish, and the interior is printed on extra heavy paper. An exquisite volume for lovers of books, art and pets.

Paperbacks

As Time Goes By edited by Hank S Davis

Time travel tales of love and the future, alternate realities, and the worlds of fantasy.

“Love’s not time’s fool,” Shakespeare wrote, though he might have added that men and women can be both love and time’s fools. For time and love are universally experienced, yet mysterious and only dimly understood. Here’s a collection of stories with both transcendental mysteries in high gear, as lovers, happy and otherwise, are caught in bizarre twists of time. On hand to twist time into pretzel shapes, if not into Moebius strips, are best-selling and award-winning authors such as Poul Anderson, John Wyndham, Christopher Priest, Richard McKenna, Michael Swanwick, Charlie Jane Anders, Tony Daniel, Sarah A. Hoyt, and more, as cupid hops aboard a time machine and the course of true love not only may not run smooth, but may run backwards and even sideways.

Includes stories by Richard McKenna (Nebula Award winning story), author of the award-winning novel The Sand Pebbles; John Wyndham, author of the mega-bestseller The Day of the Triffids; multiple-award winning author Poul Anderson, multiple award-winner Christopher Priest, author of The Prestige (BSFA Award winning novel); Charlie Jane Anders (Hugo Award winning story which is currently being developed for TV); Hugo, Nebula and World Fantasy Award winning author Michael Swanwick; Hugo Award finalist and Asimov’s Reader’s Choice Award winner Tony Daniel; Prometheus Award winner Sarah A. Hoyt; and more.

Cragbridge Hall, Book 2: The Avatar Battle by Chad Morris

In book 2 of this trilogy, Abby and Derick begin their second semester at Cragbridge Hall, the most prestigious secondary school in the world. But when Grandpa Cragbridge admits them to the Council of Keys-a secret group of people who have keys to travel back in time-strange things begin to happen. One by one, members are found unconscious and unable to wake, their keys stolen. Now Abby and Derick must scramble to figure out who is behind the attacks before they become the next victims, which would give their enemy the power to change the past forever.

The Last Revolution: A Novel by Lord Dunsany

An inspiration to many for his style and prose, Lord Dunsany was a pioneer for fantasy fiction, inspiring such famous writers as H. P. Lovecraft, J. R. R. Tolkien, and Neil Gaiman, to name a few. More than sixty years since its first publication, The Last Revolution is now once again available to readers.

In a time before computers were a mainstay of our lives, Lord Dunsany tells the story, which takes place in England, about the revolution of self-reproducing machines. Known to have a profound distaste for the Industrial Revolution, The Last Revolution touches on a topic we know all too well today: What happens if the computers take over?

“Good morning Pender. I hear you have made a Frankenstein.” This is the line that narrator Pender hears from an inventor, and he is soon playing a robot in a game of chess. Pender’s mood changes when he realizes that the computer he’s facing has an intelligence far superior to his own.

From the introduction of the robots, a tense atmosphere is noted as the robots fight for the attention of their owners. Will these machines be able to coexist with their household counterparts, or will they rise as one and take the first steps against humanity?

To fans, authors and publishers...

Is your story going to be published in time for the next New Releases? Contact us at ahwupdate at gmail dot com.  We are looking for works of alternate history, counterfactual history, steampunk, historical fantasy, time travel or anything that warps history beyond our understanding.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. Check out his short fiction. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Monday, March 11, 2013

Weekly Update #94

Editor's Note

Usually I use this space for announcements rather than editorializing, but this story caught my eye and forced me to wade into a controversial subject. To sum up, an American teacher wanted her students to understand why slavery was bad, but in an unusual manner. She asked to kids to imagine they lived in a world where slavery still existed and create posters reflecting this alternate history. People became offended after one kid made a poster featuring a reward for a runaway slave.

Personally I am siding with the teacher on this one. I have always believed counterfactuals are an excellent tool in helping truly understand the importance of historical events. As more generations are born, further separating present day humans from the events in question, it becomes easier to forget or be swayed by others who have a desire to revise how others perceive their ancestors. Furthermore, if Kevin Willmott can create a mockumentary featuring slavery in a modern day Confederacy I see no reason why others can't take from his example in teaching children about the subject.

Okay, hopefully I don't get too many angry comments.

And now the news...

Update: Clockwork Century by Cherie Priest

Cherie Priest, probably the most well-known steampunk author currently, was in the news last week. For one thing, her new novel Fiddlehead, the 5th book in her Clockwork Century, series was announced. Scheduled to come out in November, here is the synopsis from SF Signal:
Ex-spy ‘Belle Boyd’ is retired – more or less. Retired from spying on the Confederacy anyway. Her short-lived marriage to a Union navy boy cast suspicion on those Southern loyalties, so her mid-forties found her unemployed, widowed and disgraced. Until her life-changing job offer from the staunchly Union Pinkerton Detective Agency.
When she’s required to assist Abraham Lincoln himself, she has to put any old loyalties firmly aside – for a man she spied against twenty years ago.Lincoln’s friend Gideon Bardsley, colleague and ex-slave, is targeted for assassination after the young inventor made a breakthrough. Fiddlehead, Bardsley’s calculating engine, has proved an extraordinary threat threatens the civilized world. Meaning now is not the time for conflict. 
Now Bardsley and Fiddlehead are in great danger as forces conspire to keep this secret, the war moving and the money flowing. With spies from both camps gunning for her, can even the notorious Belle Boyd hold the war-hawks at bay?
In other news, David Marshall at Thinking about books reviewed her recent novel The Inexplicables. Spoiler alert, he didn't like it and described it as "terrible". Ouch, but everyone is entitled to their opinion, including Eric Brown at The Guardian who reviewed Priest's Dreadnaught and called it a "marvellous steampunk, western and horror mashup that takes time out to examine warfare, racism and gender definitions." Check out The Update's past reviews of Boneshaker and Clementine done by myself and Matthew Quinn respectively.

On a side note, Brown also reviewed James P Blaylock's The Aylesford Skull and Ian McDonald's Planesrunner so click on that article if you want to see the reviews on those novels as well.

Jim Butcher to Publish Steampunk series

Speaking of steampunk, Jim Butcher, author of The Dresden Files (wait a second, a contemporary fantasy/mystery series set in Chicago...why the hell haven't I read this yet?) will be publishing a new steampunk series for Penguin. Publisher's Weekly was the first to break the news:
Penguin Group is continuing its relationship with bestselling fantasy writer Jim Butcher. The author of the Dresden Files and Codex Alera closed a seven-figure, three-book deal with his current publisher for a new series. Anne Sowards, at Roc, took world English rights to The Cinder Spires: The Aeronaut’s Windlass, and two sequels, from agent Jennifer Jackson at Donald Maass Literary...The Cinder Spires, Jackson said, is set in a world “of black spires that tower for miles over a mist-shrouded surface” and follows a war between two of the Spires: Spire Albion and Spire Aurora.
Seven figures?!?!! I need to spend more time writing...but anyway, when asked to describe his upcoming series on a Reddit AMA, Butcher said:
It’s kinda League of Extraordinary Gentlemen meets Sherlock meets Hornblower. There are goggles and airships and steam power and bizarre crystal technology and talking cats, who are horrid little bullies.
The first book still does not have a release date, but congrats to Jim and I look forward to learning more about this upcoming series in the future.

DLC with the Famed Actor’s Powerful Voice Now Available, Trailer of Many Decibels Released

Paradox Interactive  released the powerful vocal performance of Brian Blessed as an add-on for their medieval combat title War of the Roses. Players can now charge into battle with the acting legend commanding them to victory. Available as optional DLC for the game, the “BRIAN BLESSED VO” pack replaces the existing announcer with the hearty, dramatic commands of England’s greatest voice. The DLC can be purchased via Steam for $4.99.

Turn your headphones down—or up, if you like that sort of thing—and listen to BRIAN BLESSED in this newly released video:

In addition, a free demo is now available for War of the Roses, allowing any brave warrior to pledge their steel to the houses of Lancaster or York. However, demo players will not gain any prestige inside the game – nor can they enjoy the rich vocal work of BRIAN BLESSED.

Submissions Wanted

Is it just me or is it easier to find submission requests for the horror genre? First off, if you live in the Atlanta area and have horror script you a trying to sell, this Craigslist notice might interest you. Meanwhile, fans of Lovecraft or just weird fiction in general, should check out the Lovecraft eZine and their submissions page. If you need help writing your Lovecraft story, may I recommend The H.P. Lovecraft Archive, an excellent database for your favorite Rhode Islander (well Peter Griffin might be higher on the list).

Had enough horror? Check out Water Closer Press which is calling for submissions for their next issue of Ladies and Gentlemen. Also this segment is never just about writing. Do you have an alternate history web series? Than you might be interested in submitting it to the Chronos Film Fest.

As always, good luck!

Things to do

So many things to do, so little time to do it all in (and don't forget how much a plane ticket costs):

March 14-17: The run of Mr Faust and Dr Jabberwocky in South Dunedin, NZ.

March 22-25: Steampunk at the Seaside at Camber, UK.

April 5: Deadline for panel proposals for the Alternate History Track at DragonCon.

August 9-11: The Nine Worlds Geek Fest at London, UK.

Also, those thinking of going to this year's WorldCon, should check out the list of guests released last week.

Come on, go out and have fun!

Links to the Multiverse

Articles


The 10 Least Competent Time Travelers by Rob Bricken at io9.

The Age Atomic (Excerpt) by Adam Christopher at Tor.

Blog Tour - The Charge by Sharon Bayliss at Katie Teller's Stories.

Cover & Synopsis: “Hive Monkey” by Gareth L. Powell at SF Signal.

Cover & Synopsis: Lavie Tidhar Heads to Mars with His Science Fiction Mystery “Martian Sands” at SF Signal.

Fantasy as History by Joshua S Hill at Amazing Stories.

The Joy of Steampunk by Meghan B at Stellar Four.

New Takes on Fairy Tales: A Reading List by Rebecca Joines Schinsky at Book Riot.

Solaris Commission Steampunk Novel from Gaie Sebold at SF Scope.

TOC: ‘Steampunk Specs’ Edited by Allan Kaster at SF Signal.

Today at Kirkus: Steampunk Update, Part 3 – Mash-Ups and More by John DeNardo at SF Signal.

The Return of Space-Age Alternate History (SAAH III) by David S.F. Portree at Wired.

Steampunk and Clocks by M. Holly-Rosing at Steamed!

What is Gaslamp Fantasy? by Terri Windling at Tor/Forge's Blog.

Why Is the Steampunk Community So Fractured and Fractious? by Austin Sirkin at Steampunk R&D.

Book Reviews

The Queen is Dead by Kate Locke at Falcata Times.

The Wind Whales of Ishmael by Philip José Farmer at Amazing Stories.

Comics

‘Amala’s Blade’ is exciting, thought-provoking steampunk by Michael May at CBR.

Films

The Best Steampunk Movies by CDT at Squidoo.

Watch Will Smith fight neo-dinosaurs in the new trailer for After Earth by Annalee Newitz at io9.

Wonder Woman vs The Nazis by sarawestrop at Geek Syndicate.

Games

Even in BioShock Infinite’s Alternate History, America Was a Woman. But Not a Nice One by Evan Narcisse.

Nazi Zombie Army now available! by Matt Farr at Geek Syndicate.

Steampunk 'Thief' Videogame Series Gets a Reboot by Carol Pinchefsky at Forbes.

Steampunk Tower [Game Saturday] by Martin Brinkmann at ghacks.net.

Steampunk Undersea Adventure “Fathom” Surfaces on Kickstarter by Matt Farr at Geek Syndicate.

Interviews

Liesel Schwarz at The Qwillery.

Q&A with the Authors of the New Anthology “Oz Reimagined: New Tales from the Emerald City and Beyond”  (and Part 2) by Patrick Hester at SF Signal.

Podcasts

Ratchet RetroCast Episode 4 – The Disney Deluxe Retro Jumbo XL Edition at Earth Station One.

Television

Are Modern Twists on Classics the Future? by Samantha Henry at Amazing Stories.

* * *

Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update, a blogger on Amazing Stories and a volunteer editor for Alt Hist magazine. His fiction can be found at Echelon PressJake's Monthly and The Were-Traveler. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Monday, January 14, 2013

Weekly Update #87

Editor's Note

So the Washington Academy of Sciences has developed a seal of approval for SF novels that conform to scientific fact. This seems like a great idea since I love hard SF books, but I doubt many AH books are going to cross their path. Knowing history is not exactly a requisite to being a scientist. Maybe someone should come up with a seal of approval for how plausible an AH book is...

Sorry about not posting a review for Django Unchained last Friday. I worked some overtime that day so I couldn't put the finishing touches on it for publication. Don't worry, I should have it up next Friday. Meanwhile I have two more entries to post for the No Americans contest (still accepting submissions), plus you can also send submissions for the Balkanize Me contest and voting continues for the month of March (Steampunk is winning). More importantly, Amazing Stories has some big news to announce this week. Stay tuned.

And now the news...

Update: Cherie Priest

You can't talk about steampunk these days without mentioning Cherie Priest. Although Paul Goat Allen at Barnes & Noble's site questions whether the glory days of steampunk days are over with the slew of cliched works recently published, he still holds out hope "as long as Cherie Priest continues writing her Clockwork Century novels." No pressure, Cherie.

Speaking of the Clockwork Century, Priest's novel Ganymede is being released in the UK and you can check out an extract and praise for the novel over Tor UK. Those who want to read an example of Priest's short fiction can read "Addison Howell and the Clockroach" at Lightspeed Magazine and also check out an interview with Priest over there as well where she talks about her short story, writing in the Pacific Northwest and her future plans.

Update: Gail Carriger

Fans of Gail Carriger, author of the Parasol Protectorate series, have a lot to celebrate. Her novel Soulless  is being discussed at the io9 Book Club this month, so check it out and put in your two cents.

Speaking of io9, TONIGHT you can go over there and ask her anything from 6 pm to 7pm CST. Meanwhile, if you live in California want to learn more about Gail is doing, check out her recent journal post. She is going to be touring California to promote her new novel, Etiquette & Espionage (BTW, the first 3 chapters are available for free on Amazon), and even if you do not live in Cali, you still might get a chance to participate in an online video chat.

What is Rococopunk?
Okay it is safe to say I am a nerd, but I like to keep my fandom based on what I consume for entertainment. I am not judging those who like to cosplay, it is just not my cup of tea. I lack the patience or the finances necessary to really get the look like. Although steampunk is a literary movement, you cannot deny how important the aesthetic movement has become. Still the steampunk fanatics might have some competition from rococopunk.

The premise of rococopunk is that the rococo movement never ended. You can read more about it over at Steampunk R&D and see more pictures like the one above. The movement has been making some waves and was featured on io9. Do you think it will replace steampunk?

Things to do

Bored with this reality? The Multiverse Transit Authority has a chronomatic raring and ready to take you to adventure:

May 24-26: Up in the Aether Steampunk Convention in Detroit, Michigan.

August 23-25: The stars are right for the HP Lovecraft NecronomiCon in Providence, Rhode Island.

Finally end your temporal adventure with a quick bite at the steampunk themed restaurant Boulton & Watt in NYC.

Submissions Wanted

Really quick announcement...or two. Xchyler Publishing will be accepting submissions for their Spring Steampunk Anthology until January 31st. Meanwhile Dark Fiction Magazine is open for SF, fantasy and horror short story (1k-7k words) submissions until February 28.That is all.

New Releases

E-books


Monster Earth by various authors
Welcome to a world where the Cold War was fought not with the threat of nuclear destruction, but with Giant Monsters.

Off With Their Heads! by K.A. Merikan
It’s 1907, twenty years after the outbreak of a zombie Plague. For a young student of medicine like Clint, the undead bodies provide an opportunity to study human physiology in the working. He is a good young man: tidy, well-mannered and hard working. Focused on his goal to become an excellent surgeon, Clint has a bright future ahead of him. If it weren’t for a shameful secret he’s forced to keep, his life would have been perfect.

The Report by Timothy Digg
2013, the 60th Anniversary of Great Britain joining the Greater Reich and the Coronation of King Edward 11th. This is the background to a puzzling murder at the highest levels of the National Socialist Party of Great Britain. Detective General George Hayes is given the dubious job of finding who did it. But the reader knows exactly who did it, but not why and follows George Hayes in his quest to find out.

Links to the Multiverse

Articles

5 Insane 'What If' Scenarios That Almost Changed Everything by Jacopo della Quercia at Cracked.

Never Bet Against Theodore Roosevelt in a Knife Fight by Donald R. McClarey at DFW Catholic.

Vanished Kingdoms – Etruria at Kilobooks.

Books

Don’t Cross the Streams by Steve DeWinter at Steamed!

Guest Post by Paul Levinson: The Plot to Save Socrates at Kathleen Valentine's Parlez Moi Blog.

Top 20 Best Speculative Fiction Novels of 2012 by Stephan at The Ranting Dragon.

What's going on with our Time Travel Anthology? at The Masquerade Crew.

Book Reviews

The Cassandra Project by Jack McDevitt and Mike Resnick at Thinking about books.

Farthing by Jo Walton at Things mean a lot.

Imperium by Keith Laumer at Amazing Stories.

Comics

Kieron Gillen Explores The World Of Nazi Superhumans At Avatar by Wesley Messer at Comics Crux.

Film

Christopher Nolan to Direct New Sci-Fi Film Interstellar? by Jonathan Hatfull at SciFiNow.

Steampunk Fantasy Short Film- The Wheel at Neatorama.

Interview

Con Men: Interview with the Co-Creator of Ultrasylvania at Project Million Entertainment.

John Birmingham at SFFWorld.

Paul Di Filippo at Ideas Captured.

Felix Gilman at Fantasy Literature.

Valjeanne Jeffers at The Chronicles of Harriet Tubman.

S. M. Stirling at Eating Authors.

Television

Brett Ratner to direct a time-travel show for ABC, present a vision of a Ratnerized tomorrow by Sean O'Neal at AV Club.

The Multiverse Presents Batman and Robin Parody ‘Knighthood and Decoy’ at Geek Syndicate.

Review of Elementary: Season 1, Episode 12 at Thinking about books.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update, a blogger on Amazing Stories and a volunteer editor for Alt Hist magazine. His fiction can be found at Echelon PressJake's Monthly and The Were-Traveler. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Review: Clementine by Cherie Priest

Guest post by Matthew W. Quinn.
It’s Matthew W. Quinn again, and I’ve got another review for you. It’s Cherie Priest’s Clementine.

Set in Priest’s Clockwork Century universe, the novel tells the tale of former Confederate spy Maria Isabella “Belle” Boyd who finds herself in the employ of the famous (or infamous) Pinkerton National Detective Agency in Chicago.

For starters the novel, published by Subterranean Press, is a quick read. It’s exactly 201 pages. I’m surprised there was even a hardback edition issued it’s so short, but then again, it is written by Priest, one of if not the major author of steampunk. Although the short length precludes subplots and lots of depth, many readers won’t mind.

Secondly, the novel starts out with a bang. Air pirate and escaped slave Croggon Beauregard Hainey is chasing after his airship, which has been stolen from him, in another (stolen) airship. No boring expository beginning here, but straight to the fun.

I also liked how each chapter begins with the name of the main character, be it Hainey or Boyd. And when the characters meet, there’s a bit of humor. Chapter Eight, for example, is titled “Our Players are Compelled to Collaborate.” I actually laughed upon seeing it.

The novel also introduces some interesting concepts, including a tiny dirigible-like flyer that carries two people. It fulfills the function of a personal plane or helicopter in a time where the technology for such things isn’t available. I like it.

There’s not a whole lot that’s bad about the book. I’d like some more information about how the superweapon that becomes a major part of the plot later on is supposed to work. A weapon of its nature would need line of sight to devastate an enemy city — we’re not talking a conventional artillery piece like Gerald Bull’s “Project Babylon” (the unfinished “Super Gun” of Gulf War fame) that could attack enemy targets from safe positions here. Also, the book jacket implies Boyd has to collaborate with Hainey, whom she is hunting, when there’s some kind of betrayal. That’s not how it goes down, although that’s not really much of a problem.

Also, I’d have liked some more thoughtfulness on the part of both Hainey and Boyd. The former is an escaped slave, but most of his targets are in the Union states (where it’s easier for a black man to move about), never mind that the state that whipped and imprisoned him is the Union’s enemy. Meanwhile, Boyd has to make decisions about loyalties, most importantly in a scene very late in the book where one might think she’s seriously conflicted. Although too much of this would go against the short and sweet nature of the book, a few extra paragraphs might help.

Overall, Clementine is a quick and fun read. 8.5 out of 10.

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Review: "Boneshaker" by Cherie Priest

Grade: B

I seem to have a steampunk craving these last couple of weeks.  First The Five Fists of Science and now Boneshaker by Cherie Priest.  I am not saying here is anything wrong about liking steampunk, it brings a lot of good things to the genre.

A good thing.
Since Boneshaker has been getting a lot of press lately, however, I wanted to see if the novels holds up to the hype.  Thankfully, it does.

The story is set in an alternate 1880s Seattle.  Mad scientist Leviticus Blue is blamed for destroying much of the city when his new invention, a mining device known as the "Boneshaker", causes a massive earthquake that expels a gas known as the "Blight".  The gas is incredibly lethal and worse yet, causes the dead to rise and hunger for human flesh (called "Rotters").  The people of Seattle build a wall around downtown Seattle and retreat to the remaining safe portions of the city, called the Outskirts.

Sixteen years later, Zeke Wilkes, Blue's son, goes into the walled city to clear his father's name.  Zeke's mother, Briar Wilkes, follows him in an airship, determined to rescue her son. Inside she finds people who stayed behind after the wall went up.  Most are helpful, but there is also the mysterious Dr. Minnericht, who eerily resembles her dead husband. Zeke and Briar's arrival upsets the status quo and they find themselves caught in a battle between the factions within the wall.

The story is exciting, with mysteries and secrets aplenty, and twist at the end.  Plausibility hounds, however, will cringe at the number of points of divergence.  The earliest POD involves an earlier Klondike Gold Rush that leads to Seattle being a larger city by the time the Boneshaker destroys most of it.  Besides smaller changes to Seattle history to allow for iconic buildings to be included, the American Civil War is also still going on.  There are a lot of PODs involving the war, including a southern transcontinental railroad and Stonewall Jackson having a longer life. 

The most perplexing of these PODs, however, is the mention of British troops fighting in the south.  This seems to suggest that Britain has recognized the CSA and is at war with the USA.  Yet all the characters act as if the war is an eastern problem and not something they need to worry about.  Now my geography is a little rusty, but I believe Seattle is pretty damn close to British Columbia.  Did the Canadians decide to sit this one out or what?

I almost forgot: there are zombies.  That is why I can ignore (most of the time) the plausibility issues because the story is what makes this book an excellent read and a good introduction to steampunk if you have not tried that sub-genre yet.

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Mitro is founder, editor and contributor of Alternate History Weekly Update. When he is not busy writing about his passion for alternate history, he spends his time working as a licensed attorney in the state of Illinois and dreams of being a published author himself one day.