When mechanical genius Emily is kidnapped by
rogue automatons, Finley Jayne and her fellow misfits fear the worst. What's
left of their archenemy, The Machinist, hungers to be resurrected, and Emily
must transplant his consciousness into one of his automatons—or forfeit her
friends' lives.
With Griffin being mysteriously tormented by the Aether, the young duke's sanity is close to the breaking point. Seeking help, Finley turns to Jack Dandy, but trusting the master criminal is as dangerous as controlling her dark side. When Jack kisses her, Finley must finally confront her true feelings for him...and for Griffin.
Meanwhile, Sam is searching everywhere for Emily, from Whitechapel's desolate alleyways to Mayfair's elegant mansions. He would walk into hell for her, but the choice she must make will test them more than they could imagine.
To save those she cares about, Emily must confront The Machinist's ultimate creation—an automaton more human than machine. And if she's to have any chance at triumphing, she must summon a strength even she doesn't know she has...
With Griffin being mysteriously tormented by the Aether, the young duke's sanity is close to the breaking point. Seeking help, Finley turns to Jack Dandy, but trusting the master criminal is as dangerous as controlling her dark side. When Jack kisses her, Finley must finally confront her true feelings for him...and for Griffin.
Meanwhile, Sam is searching everywhere for Emily, from Whitechapel's desolate alleyways to Mayfair's elegant mansions. He would walk into hell for her, but the choice she must make will test them more than they could imagine.
To save those she cares about, Emily must confront The Machinist's ultimate creation—an automaton more human than machine. And if she's to have any chance at triumphing, she must summon a strength even she doesn't know she has...
This series and I really have
a love hate relationship. Each time I look at the pretty covers and convince
myself that it’s steampunk and that the last one wasn’t that bad really and I
should really give it another go, and then I end up wanting to throw the book
across the room within thirty pages.
The problem for me is that
the series has so much potential that just isn’t realised, although there has
been some progress as the series has progressed. The characters are
underdeveloped, the plot was rushed in places and too slow in others, and so many
parts of the book cried out for proper researching – all things that
immediately catapult me from any enjoyment and engrossment in the story.
The character’s remained flat
caricatures, with no development from the last book. There is no progress, no
depth or detail, and as a result I found myself caring less and less about what
happened to them. I also struggled to find likeable features in Finley, the
heroine, and Sam in particular, as with the last two books. And a heroine that
I cannot warm to means the book is pretty much doomed from the start.
The romance didn’t feel like a natural progression, particularly towards the end where it felt like there was an awful lot of loose end tying going on, and no real resolution just a desperate pairing up of characters.
The romance didn’t feel like a natural progression, particularly towards the end where it felt like there was an awful lot of loose end tying going on, and no real resolution just a desperate pairing up of characters.
The writing swung from one
extreme to the next, on the whole it’s relatively ok, but then there would be
turns of phrase that were so glaringly modern that it again jarred me straight
from the story.
Whilst it is a story billed
as Victorian Steampunk, a lot of the flaws come from the technology just being
pilfered from modern day gadgets, with no explanation as to how they might be
possible in the day and age depicted. I don’t want a major science lesson and
intricate break downs of each machine, but I want to feel like these gadgets
could be possible, like the details of the plot that hinge on electronic
devices are feasible instead of just cop out substitutes of modern day
technology.
On the whole, whilst I am
desperate to see more Steampunk fiction, particularly on the young adult
shelves, ‘The Steampunk Chronicles’ really don’t fulfil the ideas I have of
what Steampunk should be. No doubt there are readers who will find these are
exactly the type of Steampunk they are after, but for me personally, I think I’ll
stick with Gail Carriger…
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