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Lädt ... Cogheartvon Peter Bunzl
Werk-InformationenCogheart von Peter Bunzl
Keine Lädt ...
Melde dich bei LibraryThing an um herauszufinden, ob du dieses Buch mögen würdest. Keine aktuelle Diskussion zu diesem Buch. A fun action filled adventure filled with wonderful mech animals and people. Lily is trying to find out what happened to her dad and at the same time find where her dad's greatest invention is before the men with strange silver eyes get there f I rat. An great introduction to steam punk for younger readers. This was...just OK. I read really good reviews and some people seem to love it, but a couple of things didn't work out for me. First, I thought the whole plot was extremely predictable, but I can live with that. The dialogue wasn't natural for me. It sounded like an old man preaching to everyone. There are some very corny lines and the way the characters talk to each other is borderline Sunday School. Also, the reaction of the kids to the things that happen just doesn't work. I mean, bad things happen. People are mean. Characters get hurt. But this all slides off the kids. All in all, it's a nice book, maybe for younger readers but doesn't live up to the potential that the cover, the name, the world building and the idea itself promises. Not a bad book, but still, not all it could have been. I received an ARC through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. Cogheart is a story of a very brave girl who teams up with a boy who becomes brave, as well as a mechanical fox and some other mechanical helping characters. It's a real steampunk story with cogs and machines and robots who feel like people. There's also a female air pirate/journalist who is awesome. This story is adventure-packed and relatively fast-paced. I liked the main characters, especially Lily, and I liked her love for machines, and that in the end she was allowed to learn what she wanted even if the interests weren't considered feminine. Still, ultimately I found this story... too bleak, if that makes sense. It does have a happy ending and a happy epilogue, but there's also a lot of death and some quite gory scenes. I'm not saying it's inappropriate for a middle grade novel really, because I don't want to patronise kids, but it wasn't as lighthearted and fun as I expected from the cover and blurb.
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Thirteen-year-old Lily Hartman always dreamed of adventure. A strong-willed girl, Lily felt trapped in a life of Victorian stuffiness at her prim boarding school. But after her father-a famous inventor-disappears on a routine zeppelin flight, Lily's life gets turned upside down. Now cared for by her guardian, the heartless Madame Verdigris, Lily is quite certain that she's being watched. Mysterious, silver-eyed men are lurking in the shadows, just waiting for their chance to strike. But what could they possibly want from her? There are rumors, Lily learns, that her father had invented the most valuable invention ever made-a perpetual motion machine. But if he made such a miraculous discovery, he certainly never told Lily. And all he left behind is a small box-with no key, no hinges. With the help of a clockmaker's son, Robert, and her mechanimal fox, Malkin, Lily escapes London in search of the one person who might know something about her father's disappearance-and what he left behind. Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
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Google Books — Lädt ... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)823.92Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 2000-Klassifikation der Library of Congress [LCC] (USA)BewertungDurchschnitt:
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I had very high hopes for this book (I adore steampunk) and while this book was great it did not completely live up to my expectations.
The story starts off a little slowly, but quickly becomes interesting once Robert and Lily meet eachother. The plot twists were a little predictable though and Lily’s scar and mr. Silverfish opinion on mechanicals were very fishy from the beginning.
Robert became my favourite character. He is a nice boy that truly learns how to be brave. Lily was very determined and awesome from the beginning, but I liked how Robert grew into his role as one of the heroes of the story. The scene at mr. Silverfish’s house where he stares in awe at the luxury and his new clothes are among my favourites.
The steampunk world was exactly as great as I hoped it would be, with lovely details about clocks (that turn out to be important later on), mechanical people, airships and mechanical animals. The victorian setting worked really well too.
My only complaint would be the fact that Robert compliments Lily’s dress and almost gets a kiss. I hope with all my heart that they do not fall in love. There are so many romances already and they work so well as friends that I think falling in love would be a step down.
My favourite part was when Robert and his dad discussed the soul of mechanicals. That was beautifully written.
Anyway, I will read the sequel. ( )