Showing posts with label Steampunk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steampunk. Show all posts
Thursday, March 3, 2016
Review: Soulless
Title: Soulless
Author: Gail Carriger
Format: Paperback
Pages: 373
Date(s) Read: July 29-30, 2015 (re-read date)
Rating: 4
Summary:
Alexia Tarabotti has no soul. She is a spinster whose father is both Italian and dead. She was rudely attacked by a vampire - standards of social etiquette broken! Things apparently go from bad to worse for Miss Tarabotti, especially when it is she who accidentally kills the vampire. Lord Maccon is soon sent by Queen Victoria to investigate. London's high society is a mess, and many people believe that Alexia is to blame. Can she figure out what is going on?
Review:
This one had definitely required a re-read because honestly I hadn't remembered much of it when I'd first read it. This series is absolutely fantastic! Seriously! I have always been a fan of anything Steampunk and this book heartily delivers, as does most of anything that Gail Carriger writes. Yes, I've read more, and there will be more books of her reviewed here...because well...STEAMPUNK.
It is refreshing to read a story with dark fantasy creatures (werewolves, vampires, ghosts) are living among humans knowingly. 1800 Victorian London is such a place where this could happen. This series has very much a Jane Austin meets Supernatural feel to it with the propriety and social standards that are of course rigorously upheld even by the creatures that walk among the human population.
Miss Alexia Tarabotti is quite the sassy, independent, strong-minded woman and her soullessness does not even dim her brightness. She will be a source of laughter and delight throughout the entire story. Lord Maccon - the loud, messy, gorgeous werewolf - sent by Queen Victoria to investigate a murder committed by one Miss Alexia Tarabotti. The pair of them together adds a level to the story that makes it all the more enjoyable.
I absolutely love the back and forth between them, and the constant sense of everything that is going on. Gail Carriger has a knack it seems for throwing you right into the middle of the action in Victorian London, and the language only enhanced it and I absolutely loved each and every page and I will be reading the remainder of this series, as well as the subsequent series set in the same world.
Sunday, December 2, 2012
Review: Innocent Darkness by Suzanne Lazaer
Title: Innocent Darkness
Author: Suzanne Lazear
Format: E-book - Galley
Read: May 13-14 2012
Rating: 3.5/5
Recommend: Maybe.
Summary: This book has a unique premise: Steampunk faerie tale. Magnolia has been sent to a school for troublesome girls, but ultimately she is broken out of the school with the aid of a Faerie. She is slated to be the sacrificial lamb to save Otherworld.
Review: I was given this book as an ARC/Galley copy from Netgalley, and the prospect of Steampunk mixed with faerie did seem intriguing especially since it raises so many questions about how the two would intermingle especially with Fae being known for having a strong allergic reaction to all things iron and frowning on the inclusion of too much mortal world technology.
There were things that I liked in this book and things that irritated me with this book. Multiple names for each character tended to get confusing, especially since each character had a nickname and their actual name but went by one or another name throughout the entirety of the book. That was one of the things that rubbed me the wrong way, and I also disliked the sudden drop off of the steampunk part of the story. The devices that were used at the beginning of the story were among my favorite and it upset me that once things shifted there was little to no more steampunk influence on the story.
Okay, so Noli is a hoyden, but there was no closure given to the harsh and unacceptable treatment she'd received at the school. It kinda irked me that there were no lasting, lingering effects (as their should have been from such treatment) and everything was suddenly overshadowed by the fact that she had to be sacrificed to save Otherworld, and ultimately the romance took over as well. While, I do like a good romance, it to me is not something that should have taken center stage when there were more pressing issues that needed to be dealt with.
Will I continue to read this series? I am on the fence about picking up the second book simply because there was a lot that had left me wanting with this one. We will see, I may pick it up just to see what twists are in it and if there is further inclusion of the steampunk or if it has merely turned into another faerie story.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
