Cassy and Alex post five days a week, including a book review every Friday! Follow us on Twitter @ReviewMeTwice and like us on Facebook! Cassy posts in purple; Alex posts in green.
Showing posts with label steampunk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label steampunk. Show all posts
Friday, December 14, 2012
Review Me Twice- Boneshaker by Cherie Priest
As we've been discussing all week, Boneshaker was our book of choice this week. I suggested it, mainly because it's been floating around for awhile, a lot of people have been talking about it and, part of the point of this blog is to inform our readers about what's out there. The Good, The Bad, The Popular and if The Popular is Good or Bad.
Boneshaker most certainly falls into the good category. It's a great steam punk novel and really gives an interesting twist to history; the Civil war has been raging on for years with no end in sight, Seattle isn't actually part of the united states yet and the world has simultaneously progressed and stayed stagnant. Briar is living on the outskirts of Seattle with her son, Zeke. What could possibly be better than steam punk in messed up America in the mid-1800s?
Well, hasn't anyone ever told you to just add Zombies? Apparently, someone told Priest, because she did, and it worked. Now, maybe I'm biased, but I'm of the mind it's really hard to mess up a Zombie story (though... I've read two of them that were pretty terrible, so maybe I'm not that biased.) Briar has been shunned by basically everyone because her husband caused the zombies (or rotters, as they refer to them in the book) and no one can stop the blight, a gas that is seeping up from the Earth and will turn any human that breathes it in too long. Walls are the only thing separating the blight from the rest of human kind.
And Zeke goes right into the middle of Seattle, and the blight, looking for answers to his past. About his father, his grandfather, even his mother.
The best thing about this book (despite the fact that it had airship pirates and zombies and really, everything to make a great story, executed wonderfully) was that you cared about EVERY character. You cared about both Zeke and Briar. You cared about the men in the bar that Briar ran into. You cared when character fell. You even cared about the bad guy! He was mean and nasty and you hated him but you cared about what happened to him because he's so awful. You want to reach into the book and choke him. There were characters that you barely met and still, you cared what happened to them. It's a rare talent that makes you really get invested in characters so easily, and Priest has that talent.
The book has everything you could want, including an interesting ending (that you may or may not guess.) I only have one complaint about the whole book. And it's barely a complaint. It's a little slow to start. The first few chapters are a little uninteresting and you're not really sure why you care, but it doesn't last long, I promise. It's just a little bit in the beginning and then you're hook; then you have to know what happens.
My bottom line 5 out of 5
I agree with Cassy that this book definitely falls into the category of "good" (if not "great" or at least "very good"). And, unlike Cassy, I am not a big fan of the zombie genre. (I prefer the infection genre, which is very close, but not quite the same thing.)
The one downfall I found to Boneshaker is that it is long, and therefore I had to read it very quickly in order to get through it so I could review it for you, dear friends. Had I not been working with a deadline, I could have taken my time reading, and spent more of that time lingering on the descriptions.
One of the most difficult things an author can do - from what I can tell - is to think up something that looks a specific way in their head, then try to describe it to the reader. No matter how specific and detailed a description the author gives, I believe it is entirely impossible to describe anything or anyone in such a way as to make the reader see exactly what the author had in mind. (If seeing exactly what the writer had in mind is important, perhaps a switch to the medium of film is in order.) I admire Priest's ability to describe things and people succinctly. She doesn't spend more than a sentence or two describing any one person (with reinforcing statements later reminding you of their stature or movements, perhaps) but I had a very clear picture in my mind the entire time I was reading.
This is a suspenseful book, with a clean cycle of rotating "omigosh they're in trouble" to "phew, they're all right" and back and forth and so on. What I think I'm saying is that it's paced like an adventure novel, so if you don't like that, this might bother you. But I'm not typically a fan of reading adventure (I prefer them in film, because they feel redundant in print) but I really enjoyed this.
I very highly recommend this book to a wide audience: anyone who likes adventure, action, zombie stories, steampunk, or wants something a little new and different to read. There are other books from the same universe (as Cassy was so kind to mention on Tuesday) and I am very interested in reading every last one of them.
Thursday, December 13, 2012
Steampunk Aesthetic
On Monday, we discussed what steampunk is. It's hard to describe in words (though Cassy did an excellent job); it's something that's easier to show than tell. And I'm happy to announce that I found the perfect demonstration...
I learned that Cherie Priest (as you should recall from Tuesday, she's the author of tomorrow's review book, Boneshaker) curated a Pinterest board full of steampunky goodness, and you can see it here. (The images below were taken from her board.)
This might be my favorite from the board, though:
I learned that Cherie Priest (as you should recall from Tuesday, she's the author of tomorrow's review book, Boneshaker) curated a Pinterest board full of steampunky goodness, and you can see it here. (The images below were taken from her board.)
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Ranging from simple... |
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...to complex.
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This might be my favorite from the board, though:
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From Kraken-Steelklaw on Deviant Art, titled "The Librarian" |
Wednesday, December 12, 2012
Favorite Steampunk
In honor of this week's steampunk theme, Cassy and I will tell you a little bit about our favorite steampunk books.
Mine could possibly be called not steampunk. But it has the right feel, it's set in the right time period, and it discusses automatons. And besides, it's the only one I'm really familiar with besides the one Cassy is writing about.
It's The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick. It won a Caldecott Award (along with several other awards) and has been a really big hit with kids (of all ages) since it was published in 2007.
Mine could possibly be called not steampunk. But it has the right feel, it's set in the right time period, and it discusses automatons. And besides, it's the only one I'm really familiar with besides the one Cassy is writing about.
It's The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick. It won a Caldecott Award (along with several other awards) and has been a really big hit with kids (of all ages) since it was published in 2007.
Given that information and that photo, you should be confused. First, thick books like that tend to intimidate most kids. But the truth is, quite a large portion of that is illustrations. Which leads to the other reason you should be confused: Caldecott Awards are for picture books. This was the first novel to win one.
The story deals with a pre-teen orphan named (surprise, surprise) Hugo Cabret who lives in a train station and spends his time fixing automatons when he isn't bsuy keeping the station's clocks running. It also deals heavily with Georges Méliès but I'd rather make you read the book to find out more about that.
I read this in 2009 or 2010 for a youth materials and services class, and really enjoyed it. I don't remember there being anything groundbreaking in our class discussion about it, just a general approval and belief that it would be popular with many different types of patrons, including the entire range from young to old, and in particular, reluctant readers.
I had not seen the film (Hugo) until very recently. It was... okay. I was excited to learn - before seeing it - that Christopher Lee, Jude Law, and Sacha Baron Cohen were all in it. Then I realized who Chloe Grace Moretz is (you may remember her from here?) and was excited about her being in it, too. But... it sort of fell flat. It was pretty, not beautiful. It was a nice way to spend time, but I probably wouldn't watch it over and over. If you enjoyed the movie, give the book a chance... it'll probably take as much time as watching the movie again (or less) and you might like it even better.
My favorite steampunk novel is actually also a favorite of Alex's too. I'm with Alex in that I haven't read a lot of steampunk (other than the book I'm going to tell you, I only have Hugo and Boneshaker on my list), but it's definitely something I would love to pick up more of.
Leviathan Series by Scott Westerfeld has to be my favorite steampunk novel. (Really, are you surprised? You shouldn't be.)
Honestly, I think I love this series so much because Westerfeld takes such a unique approach to it (as is usually the case with him.) It's set during WWI, and the Allied powers are Darwinists. All of their flying machines and other technological advances are made of animals that have been genetically engineered to do things like fly. So Deryn (our main character) actually works on an airship that's a huge whale. They have hydrogen that is naturally produced and they even get things like food from their airship. All these animals are called "beasties".
The Axis powers are the exact opposite and called Clankers. All of their weaponry is machine based. So they have huge machines, one of which is called a Stormwalker, that can roam the country side and shoot people. It's great.
Westerfeld takes the story of two young kids (one a prince and a girl masquerading as a boy), and intertwines them in this amazing story of beasties and wars and stormwalkers.
The other amazing thing about this book? The illustrations. There are black and white illustrations all throughout the book that do nothing but enhance your reading experience. Steampunk is highly visual and I think that Westerfeld really made the right choice in including illustrations in his novel.

My favorite steampunk novel is actually also a favorite of Alex's too. I'm with Alex in that I haven't read a lot of steampunk (other than the book I'm going to tell you, I only have Hugo and Boneshaker on my list), but it's definitely something I would love to pick up more of.
Leviathan Series by Scott Westerfeld has to be my favorite steampunk novel. (Really, are you surprised? You shouldn't be.)
Honestly, I think I love this series so much because Westerfeld takes such a unique approach to it (as is usually the case with him.) It's set during WWI, and the Allied powers are Darwinists. All of their flying machines and other technological advances are made of animals that have been genetically engineered to do things like fly. So Deryn (our main character) actually works on an airship that's a huge whale. They have hydrogen that is naturally produced and they even get things like food from their airship. All these animals are called "beasties".
The Axis powers are the exact opposite and called Clankers. All of their weaponry is machine based. So they have huge machines, one of which is called a Stormwalker, that can roam the country side and shoot people. It's great.
Westerfeld takes the story of two young kids (one a prince and a girl masquerading as a boy), and intertwines them in this amazing story of beasties and wars and stormwalkers.
The other amazing thing about this book? The illustrations. There are black and white illustrations all throughout the book that do nothing but enhance your reading experience. Steampunk is highly visual and I think that Westerfeld really made the right choice in including illustrations in his novel.

This is a stormwalker. Isn't it neat? These are beasties. Leviathan is on the right.
It's a great book with great characters and a great steampunk aesthetic. Even better? The series comes with The Manual of Aeronautics, which just has more fun pictures, details and crazy fun descriptions like the details of the people's uniforms or the inside of the beasties.
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
Cherie Priest
I thought that, since we covered steampunk on Monday, I'd take the time to talk about our author this week, Cherie Priest!
She won the LuLu Broker prize for this series. It actually is heavy in the horror genre, much of what Priest wrote before she began to dabble in the steampunk genre. Between her first book and Boneshaker, she actually wrote numerous amounts of short stories.
Cherie Priest was born in Tampa, FL and currently resides in Chattanooga, TN. She has an M.A. in rhetoric and professional writing and did a few years of writing for a blog and now is a staff member of Subterranean Press.
Boneshaker was actually not her first novel, though it was her most famous to date. It's what she's currently known for. However, she had a novel, a series of them actually, before Boneshaker ever came about.
- Four and Twenty Blackbirds,
- Original edition, 2003
- Re-released in a revised, much expanded, edition, 2005
- Wings to the Kingdom, October 2006
- Not Flesh Nor Feathers, October, 2007
She won the LuLu Broker prize for this series. It actually is heavy in the horror genre, much of what Priest wrote before she began to dabble in the steampunk genre. Between her first book and Boneshaker, she actually wrote numerous amounts of short stories.
- 'The Heavy', a short story. Published in Apex Digest Issue #12, March 2008.
- 'The Target Audience', a short story. Published in Noctem Aeternus January, 2008.
- 'Following Piper', a short story. Published in Subterranean Digest issue #6.
- 'Little Wards', a short story. Published in The Edge of Propinquity . June 2006
- 'The Immigrant', a short story, part of Mythic #2, October 2006 Mythic Delirium Books.
- 'Bad Sushi', a short story. Published in Apex Digest, Issue #10.
- 'Wishbones', a short story, part of Aegri Somnia. December 2006 Apex Digest.
- 'Tanglefoot', a short story, published online by Subterranean Press, 2009. First release of the Clockwork Century universe.
- 'Hell’s Bells,' Grant’s Pass, Morrigan Books 2009
- 'The Catastrophe Box', a short story Son of Retro Pulp Tales, Subterranean Press 2010
- 'Reluctance', a short story, part of "The Mammoth Book of Steampunk", first published in the UK by Robinson, an imprint of Constable & Robinson Ltd, 2012
In 2009, she came out with Boneshaker, the book that we're going to be reviewing this week. Since 2009, she has written four other novels in the Boneshaker universe, though it was Boneshaker that really caused her writing to take off.
- Boneshaker, October 2009
- Clementine, July 2010
- Dreadnought, September 2010
- Ganymede, September 2011
- The Inexplicables, November 2012
Priest actually keeps a very consistent blog. From there, you can access her twitter account, her Livejournal, her Facebook, her Flickr stream, her Goodreads page, her Youtube channel, and her Google+ account. She is probably one of the most well connected writers to her fan base, not to mention significantly busy keeping up all those venues. Those are probably the best places to find out more about her, her writings and her tour dates.
Happy Reading!
Monday, December 10, 2012
What is Steampunk?
This week we're reviewing Boneshaker, which is a steampunk novel. Steampunk has actually had a pretty recent uprising, though it's been around, technically, since the 80s. It is a piece of work that takes place usually in the 19th and very early 20th century and is a mixture of history and industrialized west. It's like a genre mashup (which, if you recall from this post, is becoming ever more popular). It can be either post-apocalyptic or just an alternate form of history.
The major steampunk influences are actually a little surprising: H.G. Wells, Jules Verne and Mary Shelly are the forerunners of steampunk, the first authors to mix the industrialized west into their novels. Technically, they aren't TRUE steampunk because, well, they were writing about their own time periods, not history, so it's a little different.
Literature is a HUGE medium of steampunk now. Some big ones are Scott Westerfeld's Leviathan or Phillip Pullman's His Dark Materials. Both of these take history and combine it with machinery.
Dear Locus,
Enclosed is a copy of my 1979 novel Morlock Night; I'd appreciate your being so good as to route it Faren Miller, as it's a prime piece of evidence in the great debate as to who in "the Powers/Blaylock/Jeter fantasy triumvirate" was writing in the "gonzo-historical manner" first.
—K.W. Jeter (courtesy of Wikipedia)
The major steampunk influences are actually a little surprising: H.G. Wells, Jules Verne and Mary Shelly are the forerunners of steampunk, the first authors to mix the industrialized west into their novels. Technically, they aren't TRUE steampunk because, well, they were writing about their own time periods, not history, so it's a little different.
Literature is a HUGE medium of steampunk now. Some big ones are Scott Westerfeld's Leviathan or Phillip Pullman's His Dark Materials. Both of these take history and combine it with machinery.
This is Westerfeld's Novel. See all the neat gears?
Can't you just hear the clunking and whirring from there?
Steampunk has a lot of fun, anachronistic onomatopoetic opportunities.
Can't you just hear the clunking and whirring from there?
Steampunk has a lot of fun, anachronistic onomatopoetic opportunities.
So where did the term steampunk come from? It was actually in response to this unknown sub-culture rising. Cyberpunk was huge in the 80s and here comes this movement, based very much on the Victorian age with a dash of gears and machines thrown in. K.W. Jeter (a sci-fi author) actually coined the term, in a very tongue in cheek letter that he wrote to Locus magazine:
Enclosed is a copy of my 1979 novel Morlock Night; I'd appreciate your being so good as to route it Faren Miller, as it's a prime piece of evidence in the great debate as to who in "the Powers/Blaylock/Jeter fantasy triumvirate" was writing in the "gonzo-historical manner" first.
Though of course, I did find her review in the March Locus to be quite flattering.Personally, I think Victorian fantasies are going to be the next big thing, as long as we can come up with a fitting collective term for Powers, Blaylock and myself. Something based on the appropriate technology of the era; like 'steam-punks', perhaps.
—K.W. Jeter (courtesy of Wikipedia)
Now, we see steampunk everywhere. Will Smith did the movie Wild Wild West, SyFy's mini-series Tin Man and of course, the movie The League of Extraordinary Gentleman.
Steampunk is also a huge cosplay movement. People dress up and get some really intricate costumes.
This is pretty typical steampunk outfits: browns and grays and gears.
Steampunk has really permeated pop culture. It's in books, movies, even music. People have steampunk weddings even. If you have several hours to kill and nothing better to do, you could get trapped under an avalanche of results by searching for steampunk on Etsy. It's become it's own culture and movement. And are we surprised? It lets us recreate history in a unique way and has a fascinating style to go along with it.
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