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Lädt ... Hounds of Autumnvon Heather Blackwood
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Melde dich bei LibraryThing an um herauszufinden, ob du dieses Buch mögen würdest. Keine aktuelle Diskussion zu diesem Buch. Terrific book. Chloe Sullivan is an inventor in a SteamPunk version of Victorian England. Chloe is visiting her husband's sister's family in Dartmoor and the very first thing that they come across is the body of another inventor whom Chloe has been corresponding with and whom the primary suspect is the inventor's mechanical hound. Can Chloe solve the mystery before someone else is killed? What I enjoyed is how well Ms. Blackwood sets the stage and develops the characters and seamlessly blends the machines and Victorian attitudes. Terrific book. Chloe Sullivan is an inventor in a SteamPunk version of Victorian England. Chloe is visiting her husband's sister's family in Dartmoor and the very first thing that they come across is the body of another inventor whom Chloe has been corresponding with and whom the primary suspect is the inventor's mechanical hound. Can Chloe solve the mystery before someone else is killed? What I enjoyed is how well Ms. Blackwood sets the stage and develops the characters and seamlessly blends the machines and Victorian attitudes. Terrific book. Chloe Sullivan is an inventor in a SteamPunk version of Victorian England. Chloe is visiting her husband's sister's family in Dartmoor and the very first thing that they come across is the body of another inventor whom Chloe has been corresponding with and whom the primary suspect is the inventor's mechanical hound. Can Chloe solve the mystery before someone else is killed? What I enjoyed is how well Ms. Blackwood sets the stage and develops the characters and seamlessly blends the machines and Victorian attitudes. I’ll admit it, I love the steampunk genre, and this book doesn’t disappoint. In addition, this book is very compelling murder mystery story in its own right. In fact, the murder mystery is really what drives the story. The mystery is compelling, interesting, and puzzling right up until the end. The hero of the book, Chloe Sullivan, is the perfect example of a strong female heroine. She is resourceful, intelligent, and strong-willed. The police seem to be botching the investigation of her friend’s death, so Chloe takes it upon herself to do a little investigation of her own. Now, I don’t want to give away any spoilers, so I won’t say any more. I will say I read this book in a single day, staying up until the wee hours of the morning because I was so engrossed in the story. Five stars. This book will appeal to both fans of mystery novels and to fans of steampunk. I’m definitely going to look for more by this author. Zeige 5 von 5 keine Rezensionen | Rezension hinzufügen
They say that the moor has eyes. It is 1890, and the windswept moors hold dark secrets. Chloe Sullivan is an amateur inventor whose holiday takes a dark turn when her friend and colleague, one of the few female mechanical experts in the British Empire, is murdered. A black mechanical hound roams the moors, but could it have killed a woman? And what secrets are concealed within the dark family manor? Accompanied by her naturalist husband and clockwork cat, Chloe is determined to see her friend's killer found. But some secrets have a terrible cost. Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
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'Hounds Of Autumn' was a lottery book for me. I needed a book with 'Autumn' in the title as part of a reading challenge. I'd never read Heather Blackwood before and I haven't really read much steampunk. It turned out to be a (small) lottery win for me and I'll certainly be reading more of Heather Blackwood's books.
For the first two-thirds of the book, I had 'Hounds Of Autumn' tagged as an engaging cosy mystery set in a steampunk version of Victorian England. There were airships and cunningly crafted, battery-powered, semiautonomous mechanicals, mysterious goings-on on the Moor and married women being very much in the power of their husbands. Our heroine was an inventor of mechanicals and has a much older, moderately wealthy, botanist husband who indulges her unwomanly fascination with automata.
The only things that marred my enjoyment were small slips that showed me that Heather Blackwood isn't from England. The first was early in the book when, on finding a dead body in a bog in the Moor, she wrote that it was a miracle that the body had been found at all,,,
´,,,in the thousands of miles of bogs and marshes’
By English standards, that’s an impossibly large number.
Dartmoor National Park is 368 square miles. Yellowstone National Park is almost ten times that size at 3,468 square miles. If you’re used to US National Parks, Dartmoor must seem like something you’d miss if you blinked, but then, the whole of England is 50,337 square miles, so about the size of Alabama.
Then there were problems with speech. An Englishwoman would no more describe tea as 'hot tea' than a Canadian would describe hockey as 'ice hockey'. Nor would an Englishman, on receipt of a loan, promises to 'repay every cent.' rather than repaying every penny. These were small things but they kept bouncing me out of the story.
Then, suddenly, in the last third of the book, 'Hounds Of Autumn' found its legs and became a more serious and more powerful book. It wasn't cosy any more. It was violent and deadly, driven by jealousy, hatred, shame and long-kept secrets. It became centred around very powerful, very decisive women and the conflicts between them.
I found myself turning the pages, keen to know what happened next, and being pleasantly surprised at the punch that the plot and the characters delivered.
As far as I can see, 'Hounds Of Autumn' is a standalone novel, so I can't follow our heroine's adventures further, but I have bought 'The Clockwork Cathedral' (isn't that an attention-getting title?) which is the first book in 'The Time Corps Chronicles' so that I can read more of Heather Blackwood's books. ( )