mark monday's Reviews > Boneshaker
Boneshaker (The Clockwork Century, #1)
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engaging but decidedly minor yarn featuring brave women, pirate airships, a zombie plague, and a battered & barricaded alternate seattle. the steampunk elements are of the american west variety, so as far as the atmosphere conveyed, this is more muggy days than foggy nights. enjoyable for the most part, although the highly tedious & annoying character of the son made the last third tough-going at times.
i really don't have much else to say. this was a pleasant and forgettable way to pass an evening. so here are some things to fill out this so-called review:
fridtjof nansen:
i really don't have much else to say. this was a pleasant and forgettable way to pass an evening. so here are some things to fill out this so-called review:
fridtjof nansen:
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by
knig
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May 09, 2012 03:38AM

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that moustache! those burning eyes, looking right through you!

Her son is a teenager, after all - that tedious age in which one knows that they have no longer the forgiveness, ease, and innocent misunderstandings of childhood, yet they are still so very far from the knowledge and security of adulthood - and with the whole world around them and all its mysteries and dangers waiting, it feels like taking control of one's fate is the only way to successfully seize maturity. Of course he seems self-absorbed and rebellious! He doesn't know what else to do but to prove his way into being taken seriously as an independent adult.
And as for the overall narrative - Cherie Priest very deliberately paced it exactly as she, its composer and its conductor, knew it had to be. If she had wanted it to be a rollicking, cracking steam-filled shootup and zombiefest, she would have written it that way; but this is what she set out to write, and this is what we have. I for one am a fan of such pacing and rich, honest, logical characterization - and as such, I was greatly taken with the results.
Finally, if "that infernal son" is really such a bother to you, well--don't we all run into people we dislike all the time? They all have/had mothers and fathers, and they all have their faults and their choices in life which lead to them. Just like the jerk on the street, if reading about her son is such a bother, keep in mind...he will pass, and you will move on.
Bravo, Mrs. Priest.

did you enjoy the rest of the series as much as you did this one?

Kay, i have no idea. but whatever they may be, their utter cuteness means i can watch that gif over and over and over and over and over again, for the rest of my life.


not trying to be a jerk, but can you explain what was logical about the mother character's mindset throughout the book?
maybe the bad guy is my husband. even though i know for a fact that i murdered him.
the only reason the plot wasn't spoiled before the climax and big reveal was she refused to think about what she knew had already happened. and that was when i entirely checked out of a book i was barely enjoying anyway.
i didn't have a problem with the pacing, by the way. i thought the action scenes were boring too.
hmm, maybe i am trying to be a jerk.
