Showing posts with label Victorian England. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Victorian England. Show all posts

Saturday, April 18, 2015

The Royal Perfects

The Royal Perfects

Review of The Royal Perfects by Jeremy Neeley

Overview from www.barnesandnoble.com: Plagued by a rare disease and the vengeful curse of a former school headmaster, Timmy Wicketts finds himself a directionless vagabond on the streets of the 19th century English town of Upper Southrump. Out of desperation he turns to street performing, and that choice leads him on a journey grander than any he could have imagined. His is a true tale of love, friendship, and perseverance.

My Review:

Timothy Wickets hails from the strange sounding Southrump in Victorian England, where he has been expelled from a prestigious school just a few months shy of graduation. Unfortunately his former head master had put the word out around town about him and no one will hire the young man.

This forces him to look for a work at the bottom of a pig trough, literally. The only man who will hire him, Samuel Mudd, is an entrepreneur with a revolutionary idea. He wants to start his own pig drawn cart to transport customers around the city. Wickets readily agrees and before long he has made quite an impression as well as some money.

However as things start to go downhill, Timmy quickly finds himself living on the street until one day he runs into a fellow school chum who offers to buy him some food in exchange for an encore performance of some of his skills as an impressionists. Wickets agrees which leads him into a whole new life as an actor, eventually founding a troop of his own called The Royal Perfects.

The book tells the story of his adventures in this endeavor as well as his other jobs but mainly focuses on the story of The Royal Perfects in general which was something of a disappointment to me. We started with Timmy as our main character and I really thought it was going to stay that way but once the other characters got introduced the author did some head hopping, more than I would have liked.

The other thing I didn’t care for much was the style of writing in some passages. For example at one point when The Royal Perfects hold an audition for more actors, we get at least a paragraph summarizing the back story of the seven guys who are auditioning for three spots. I thought that perhaps this was to build up sympathy for these guys who all have had a rough go in the world but later when three of them walk out to join Timmy’s nemesis John Smith, I felt let down. I was hoping that they might redeem themselves later on in the story but they don’t. So tell me again why I needed to know their back story?

On the plus side, I liked the characters. They had charm, spark and personality. They could also be very funny.

I also liked the story itself, most of it anyway. It was not dull most of the time and I loved the humor in the characters in spite of their circumstances. Give it a try.

Contains: some sexuality

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Lady of Devices












Review of Lady of Devices by Shelley Adina

Overview from www.bn.com: Book one of the bestselling Magnificent Devices series!
London, 1889. Victoria is Queen. Charles Darwin's son is Prime Minister. And steam is the power that runs the world.
At 17, Claire Trevelyan, daughter of Viscount St. Ives, was expected to do nothing more than pour an elegant cup of tea, sew a fine seam, and catch a rich husband. Unfortunately, Claire's talents lie not in the ballroom, but in the chemistry lab, where things have a regrettable habit of blowing up. When her father gambles the estate on the combustion engine and loses, Claire finds herself down and out on the mean streets of London. But being a young woman of resources and intellect, she turns fortune on its head. It's not long before a new leader rises in the underworld, known only as the Lady of Devices . . .
When she meets Andrew Malvern, a member of the Royal Society of Engineers, she realizes her talents may encompass more than the invention of explosive devices. They may help her realize her dreams and his . . . if they can both stay alive long enough to see that sometimes the closest friendships can trigger the greatest betrayals . . .

My Review:

Lady of Devices was special for me, in a way, and not because I am personally attached to the book. It was special—or at least different—because it is the first Steam punk novel that I have ever read.

Since I first read about this genre I have always been curious what one of its novels would be like so when a reader of Barnes and Noble’s blog recommended this book (and mentioned the fact that it was also free), I thought this would be a great way to see if this genre could appeal to me.

I love history and have always liked the Victorian era so it seemed like a natural fit. I still can’t say that I really understand what Steampunk is all about but I think I have a better idea.

So back to the book. The verdict is that I liked it a lot. It seems to be a blend of some form of alternate history where gasoline powered vehicles do not become the dominant means of transportation but rather those of steam.

Also, though Victorian standards still rule, women seem to have more options open to them in this version of London. Our heroine, Claire, is a smart and capable young lady of means who may not necessarily be the most attractive girl in London. Nevertheless, she knows what she wants to do with her life and it is not to marry some upper crust loser and live unhappily ever after. She wants to go to the university.

It seems like her mother will have the upper hand though and after her finishing school graduation she will be expected to make a suitable match. But everything changes when her father dies and leaves the family with next to nothing.

Claire is told to stay behind at their old home while her mother relocates their family. But when there old home is attached by those seeking vengeance against her father Claire is forced to move in with some ruffian children so that she can realize her dream of independence from her mother.

The story is moving and entertaining at the same time though I think I might have enjoyed it a little more if I understood more about this genre.

Claire is feisty and determined yet caring. Even when her friends let her down, she still chooses to believe in them. She was certainly a heroine who I felt invested in and wanted to succeed.

The novel itself doesn’t take too many huge leaps regarding the original feel of the period though much of the technology as well as the status of United States was different. This only made the story more interesting to me.

If you like history and are content with taking a few leaps of fantasy along with it, I think you might like this novel as well. And the best part? There wasn’t any objectionable material that I have encountered in some of the other books that I have review on here. I just might decide to read another of novel by this author in the near future. And I am definitely recommending this one.