mark monday's Reviews > Leviathan
Leviathan (Leviathan, #1)
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this is a zippy, high-spirited breeze of a novel, aimed at the lucrative TROPE(1) audience - and with clear appeal for even younger folks. as far as characterization and narrative go, there is not much here that will suprise or challenge the reader...but the novel does have charm, lots of it. don't expect to get your mind blown, but it is certainly a pleasant way to spend a few hours. and there are many enjoyable elements in the now-almost-played-out use of TROPE(2): big clanky walking-machines, living dirigibles and various flying machines or machine-beasts, the setting itself, and the enjoyable TROPE(3) of europe during the first world war - now rife with imaginative historical tweaks and simmering distrust between the machine-lovin' Clankers and the evolutionary mix-masters, the Darwinists.
the TROPE(4) is rather standard - a plucky, mouthy, resilient young TROPE(5) who TROPE(6) to have the adventures of a boy. nonetheless, despite the familiarity of the gender-bending, she is thoroughly enjoyable. the TROPE(7) is also rather standard - a prickly and often high-handed little TROPE(8), but also a TROPE(9) one too. both TROPE(10) are TROPE(11) on several occasions. their TROPE(12) is nicely played out through TROPE(13) and the inevitable TROPE(14) wait to rear their predictable little heads until very near the end, as the young miss starts feeling some sparks during a fervent bit of grateful hugging. it is actually adorable, and all the better for its lack during most of the novel. and there are also two adult characters who are fun (but, again, rather standard) - an eccentric zookeeper/scientist/envoy/ TROPE(15) and her probable TROPE(16), a sardonic and loyal austrian 'wildcount'.
the narrative is propulsive yet episodic. there is no standard TROPE(17) for the hero or heroine, although i suppose Alek's TROPE(18) to the austrian crown may eventually qualify...but so far, there is really nothing for him to quest after, as he spends most of his time hiding and running. for the time-being, the reader is immersed in action that comes breathless and willy-nilly, with little pause for reflection or rumination. i would have appreciated some more quiet times where the reader gets to live and breathe the characters' lives and the world's strangeness, but clearly the novel is geared more towards younger, shorter attention spans.
i love the steampunk subgenre. on that level, the novel succeeds. i may just be a sucker for reading about TROPE(19), about TROPE(20) (although obviously this novel is not set during the victorian era), about TROPE(21), about TROPE(22) in general.
the novel includes a bunch of pleasing black-and-white illustrations. they are wonderful. almost TROPE(23)-ific! minus the TROPE(24), of course.
_______________________________
KEY
1. Young Adult
2. steampunk
3. alterna-history
4. heroine
5. tomboy
6. disguises herself as a boy
7. hero
8. prince
9. sad and rather tragic
10. almost over-their-heads heroes
11. brave and quick-thinking and save the day
12. gradual coming-together
13. alternating pov chapters
14. romantic clichés
15. liberated lady
16. surprise love interest
17. Quest
18. legacy as the heir
19. futuristic yet strangely archaic technology
20. quasi-victorian explorations of sexual repression/gender imbalance
21. nifty new ways that evolution can be tweaked
22. anachronism
23. Edward Gorey
24. morbid child-killing
the TROPE(4) is rather standard - a plucky, mouthy, resilient young TROPE(5) who TROPE(6) to have the adventures of a boy. nonetheless, despite the familiarity of the gender-bending, she is thoroughly enjoyable. the TROPE(7) is also rather standard - a prickly and often high-handed little TROPE(8), but also a TROPE(9) one too. both TROPE(10) are TROPE(11) on several occasions. their TROPE(12) is nicely played out through TROPE(13) and the inevitable TROPE(14) wait to rear their predictable little heads until very near the end, as the young miss starts feeling some sparks during a fervent bit of grateful hugging. it is actually adorable, and all the better for its lack during most of the novel. and there are also two adult characters who are fun (but, again, rather standard) - an eccentric zookeeper/scientist/envoy/ TROPE(15) and her probable TROPE(16), a sardonic and loyal austrian 'wildcount'.
the narrative is propulsive yet episodic. there is no standard TROPE(17) for the hero or heroine, although i suppose Alek's TROPE(18) to the austrian crown may eventually qualify...but so far, there is really nothing for him to quest after, as he spends most of his time hiding and running. for the time-being, the reader is immersed in action that comes breathless and willy-nilly, with little pause for reflection or rumination. i would have appreciated some more quiet times where the reader gets to live and breathe the characters' lives and the world's strangeness, but clearly the novel is geared more towards younger, shorter attention spans.
i love the steampunk subgenre. on that level, the novel succeeds. i may just be a sucker for reading about TROPE(19), about TROPE(20) (although obviously this novel is not set during the victorian era), about TROPE(21), about TROPE(22) in general.
the novel includes a bunch of pleasing black-and-white illustrations. they are wonderful. almost TROPE(23)-ific! minus the TROPE(24), of course.
_______________________________
KEY
1. Young Adult
2. steampunk
3. alterna-history
4. heroine
5. tomboy
6. disguises herself as a boy
7. hero
8. prince
9. sad and rather tragic
10. almost over-their-heads heroes
11. brave and quick-thinking and save the day
12. gradual coming-together
13. alternating pov chapters
14. romantic clichés
15. liberated lady
16. surprise love interest
17. Quest
18. legacy as the heir
19. futuristic yet strangely archaic technology
20. quasi-victorian explorations of sexual repression/gender imbalance
21. nifty new ways that evolution can be tweaked
22. anachronism
23. Edward Gorey
24. morbid child-killing
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Reading Progress
Finished Reading
March 25, 2011
– Shelved
June 26, 2011
– Shelved as:
fog-and-gears
March 31, 2012
– Shelved as:
rain-man-reviews
January 12, 2019
– Shelved as:
inbetweenworld
Comments Showing 1-31 of 31 (31 new)
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message 1:
by
karen
(new)
Jun 29, 2011 03:52PM

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i started this book but it was so boring. how does scott westerfield make steampunk imperial walkers boring?


Okay, I don't have to ask now, since I looked at the site mentioned by Levina. So she saved me from making a fool of myself. Oh, I guess she didn't, did she!

Ted, never feel foolish with me! i am a foolish person, i promise you.

ha! love it



I agree the young characters' gradual coming together is nicely played out in alternating POV chapters, but not that Steampunk is played out in the more negative sense of 'played out'. Steampunk effectively subsumes and continues part of what we used to call Science Fiction and will probably do so indefinitely, even if it eventually changes name again.
Thanks Mark.
J. T. Shea

I love that! good one JT. can't agree with you on steampunk, it is a guilty favorite for me.

Oh wait, it's the ONLY comment on this thread in 2016. Apart from this one by me. And anything anyone else may add during the next few days.
And if one did trope off would one end up in the troposphere?