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Paperback Extraordinary Engines: The Definitive Steampunk Anthology. Edited by Nick Gevers Book

ISBN: 1844166341

ISBN13: 9781844166343

Extraordinary Engines: The Definitive Steampunk Anthology. Edited by Nick Gevers

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

$5.69
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Book Overview

Extraordinary Engines: The Definitive Steampunk Anthology assembles original stories by some of the genre's foremost writers. Edited by Nick Gevers, this collection includes brand new stories by... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

steampunk story collection

This an anthology of authors who are talented in their field. We are given wonderfully written short stories in a variety of fantastic steampunk settings. My favorite is about steam-powered automatons who fight it out for everyone's entertainment. I highly recommend this gem of a book.

All in all a worthy collection of Steampunk tales

I have to admit I was a little leery of picking up `Extraordinary Engines', one of two steampunk anthologies released in 2008. I had read the VanderMeers' `Steampunk' collection and came away from it a bit underwhelmed. But unlike the VanderMeer's anthology, which was a collection of previously published material, `Engines' features all new tales specifically commissioned for the book. So I decided to spend my $7.99 and see what editor Nick Gevers has wrought. It's rare to find an anthology that contains a preponderance of noteworthy entries, but I'm always willing to see what an editor new to the field can accomplish. `Engines' contains 13 Steampunk and steam-fantasy entries; the authors are all well-published. Some, such as Ian MacLeod and Jay Lake, also are contributors to the VanderMeer's book. The best stories are: `Machine Maid', by Margo Lanagan, is at once amusing, and quietly vicious. The nameless first person narrator is a newlywed prim Victorian housewife, who joins her husband at his ranch in the Australian Outback. She discovers (to her shock and dismay) that the house's resident robotic maid `Clarissa' has been programmed to perform...rather Unique duties. Her loathing for her husband is redoubled, and this may have consequences for Clarissa's new domestic chores... `Hannah', by Keith Brooke, provides a gaslight-inspired mix of murder mystery and horror. At the scene of a murder, a scientist embarks on a nascent Victorian version of C.S.I. by conducting forensic examinations on traces of blood and tissue. Will his findings bring him closer to the identity of the murderer, or will they tell him more than he wants to know about the identity of the victim ? Featuring some surprising plot twists and an offbeat ending, this is a gem of a Steampunk tale. `Petrolpunk', by Adam Roberts, takes alternate worlds, eccentric Victorian regents, and conspiracies centered on oil, and churns them into an engaging story with a healthy leavening of humor. Jay Lake's `The Lollygang Save the World on Accident' borrows a tried and true SF trope from John Crowley's 1975 novel `The Deep': a race of humans is ensconced in an enormous iron tube, the `Big Pipe', a mile in width and stuffed with all manner of decks, alcoves, speaking-tubes, and mysterious passageways. Much like Crowley's world, The Big Pipe, constructed ages ago by a race of Builders so advanced as to seem God-like, is suspended in a formless Void. The urchin Per is member of the Lollygang, one of many gangs infesting the lower levels of the Big Pipe. When he grows mistrustful of a technology left over by the Pipe's Builders, the rest of the gang are displeased, and that means trouble for Per... Some of the other stories in `Extraordinary Engines' stay true to the Steampunk ethos; James Lovegrove's `Steampunch', MacLeod's `Elementals', Robert Reed's `American Cheetah', and Kage Baker's `Speed, Speed the Cable' are all worked around themes that devotees of the genre will find familiar

Dreadful Pennies

First, it appears that there are different editions of this book. I have a mass market paperback edition, picked up used online, that does not contain a few selections that are mentioned in the product description and by the previous reviewers. Mine is possibly a Canadian edition, but it's similar enough to what is described elsewhere. In any case, buyer beware. At least I can review the portion of the overall collection that I did receive. The previous reviewers are correct in that steampunk is rather difficult to define, and editor Nick Gevers has selected some stories that blur that vague definition, so hyping this book as the "definitive anthology" (as stated on the cover) is a bit of a stretch. The stories here are all new by a variety of well-established writers, with some already accomplished in steampunk but others probably experimenting with the form for the first time. A couple of writers who are not known for steampunk, James Morrow and Robert Reed, unleash some highly creative tales. But on the other hand, Kage Baker contributes what is actually a time travel story with some steampunk elements tacked on, and Marly Youmans's interminably talky contribution fails to build believable steampunk imagery. Fortunately, this anthology does have some very rewarding contributions from James Lovegrove and Adam Roberts, who really deliver on the best of what steampunk has to offer. But overall, the anthology's selections tend toward the dry and talky in ways that might turn off the fans of SF and cyberpunk who should naturally flock to steampunk. It's a fascinating sub-genre that is ably introduced here but not definitively anthologized. [~doomsdayer520~]

Decent, but hardly definitive, collection of short stories

Highlights here are Lucius Shepard (always good, though my favorite of his remains Life During Wartime), Michael Moorcock (so much of his writing has at least the feel of steampunk to it), and Paul Di Filippo (who I wasn't as familiar with) contributions. Quite a good book of science fiction with the theme of steampunk very broadly construed. I mean, it's easy for the steampunk label to become simply goggles, brass lamps, a zeppelin in the background, and Edwardian lingerie. And maybe that's what folks are looking for, but the best of science fiction truly merits the title speculative fiction. Not all of the pieces are excellent, but that's also par for a themed collection. You get a feel for the writing of a batch of authors and can pursue their individual works if you're interested.

Extraordinary Engines A Steampunk Anthology

This is a short story compilation of writers by Kage Baker, Michael Moorcock, Robert Reed, Lucius Shepard, Brian Stableford, Jeff VanderMeer and edited by Nick Gevers. Like many anthologies, some stories are stronger than others are, some are excellent, and some you will just skip through without even skimming them. The overall book though is very good and was very readable and enjoyable. Some of the standout stories though were Kage Baker's story with Edward Bell-Fairfax from the Company Series. The part that was the saddest is that many of the stories were not really Steampunk, and that is ok, as Steampunk is a hard genre to identify, and one would be thinking more of The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen for a true Steampunk look and feel. Outside of not being in line with what I consider Steampunk, the stories overall were ok, with the standard standouts and stories to skip. It was worth picking up and reading because of those strong stories, Kage Baker, American Cheetah, Steampunch (which did meet the idea of Steampunk), and Elementals. Otherwise, everyone's opinion will vary and people will latch onto the stories from authors that they like. An anthology can never be 100% satisfying, good to read yes, but had some issues. 4 of 5 stars, worth getting for the authors that you like.
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