Saturday, December 25, 2010

Invasion



Ooooooooo! Doesn't that sound chilling! Nothing like a story filled with flesh-eating revenants (zombies), clockwork automata full of human tissue (robots), crashing airships (dirigibles), and a handsome British detective team cracking the case! In the spirit of my Sister Aurora (who is feverishly writing away on her new book), I chose the obscure, yet intriguing genre of Steampunk.

Perhaps, you're scratching your head over this one. One friend of mine gave me the most curious look when I mentioned my read this week. She's been pestering me for some time to read a really good vampire novel (I guess we'll just have to wait and see on that one!) and in the process I told her about Steampunk. Yes, Virginia, this really is a genre. Other than watching the dreadful movie Time Machine, this was my first encounter (Oh wait, I did catch that Castle episode as well!) with Steampunk.

So, this week I hunkered down and cracked open George Mann's The Affinity Bridge. I like the cover art, but after reading it, I kind of wish they'd gone with an automaton on the cover. The description of those little clockwork men is creepy! The author, George Mann, is the head of a major British SF/Fantasy publishing imprint. He's also done his share of editing in the past (keep this in mind as I move into my review). Mann has edited the Solaris Book of New Science Fiction anthology series. He's also written numerous other works of fiction and nonfiction. The Affinity Bridge was published in 2009, through A Tor Book. This novel is the first in the 'Newbury & Hobbes Investigation' series.


Plot and Setting: London, England, 1901-- There are two things plaguing the sanity of Londoners: ghastly revenants (zombies) stalking the streets at night, and the "glowing bobby" -- a ghostly policeman killing off wastrels down in Whitechapel. Early in the story, an airship crashes in a park and two obvious problems arise: the automaton pilot is missing and all the passengers have been tied to their seats. And how did a Dutch nobleman manage to be aboard this passenger ship? Newbury and Hobbes are on the case of the missing automaton, but does it coincide with the case of the "glowing bobby"? Will Bainbridge do more than just stand around and watch? Is there love blooming between the Avenger-esque couple? Who will win the Super Bowl? Oh . . . sorry . . . I got carried away with all the questioning.


Cast of Main Characters: The dashing Sir Maurice Newbury -- He works double duty as a special agent for the Crown, Her Majesty Queen Victoria, and as an anthropologic scientist at the local museum. Newbury is coming up on forty-years-of-age and has a wicked addiction to laudanum. The lovely Miss Veronica Hobbes -- She is hired on as Newbury's assistant at the museum, but takes on the role of crime fighter as well. Hobbes is in her early twenties and deals with a psychic sister living in the local asylum. Sir Charles Bainbridge -- The Chief Inspector at Scotland Yard and rather a lousy sidekick when it comes to deadly skirmishes. Last, but not least, the evil duo of scientist Pierre Villiers and airship entrepreneur Joseph Chapman.

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