Steampunk III
Steampunk Revolution
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
Playfully mashing up the romantic elegance of the Victorian era with whimsically modernized technology, the wildly popular steampunk genre is here to stay. Now...long live the revolution!
Steampunk Revolution features a renegade collective of writers and artists, including steampunk legends and hot, new talents rebooting the steam-driven past and powering it into the future. Lev Grossman's "Sir Ranulph Wykeham-Rackham, GBE, a.k.a. Roboticus the All-Knowing" is the Six-Million-Dollar Steampunk Man, possessing appendages and workings recycled from metal parts, yet also fully human, resilient, and determined. Bruce Sterling's "White Fungus" introduces steampunk's younger cousin, salvage-punk, speculating on how cities will be built in the future using preexisting materials. Cat Valente's "Mother Is a Machine" explores the merging of man and machine and a whole new form of parenting. In Jeff VanderMeer's anti-steampunk story "Fixing Hanover," a creator must turn his back on his creation because it is so utterly destructive. And Cherie Priest presents "The Clockroach," a new and very unsettling mode of transportation.
Going far beyond corsets and goggles, Steampunk Revolution is not just your granddad's zeppelin—it's an even wilder ride.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
VanderMeer's follow-up to previous similarly themed anthologies targets established fans of the retro-infatuated steampunk movement. In addition to four nonfiction pieces by gnere luminaries such as Jaymee Goh of "Silver Goggles" fame, including Margaret Killjoy's "Steampunk Shapes Our Future," the collection offers 28 stories, several of them standouts. In Ben Peek's "Possession," a botanist trying to regenerate soil in the Earth's crust discovers a dying female android, while Karin Tidbeck's sad, whimsical "Beatrice" relates a tale of love between man and airship. Vandana Singh's "A Handful of Rice" entertains with its alternate history of India. Technology runs amok in Jeff VanderMeer's "Fixing Hanover," in which inventors suffer unintended consequences from their creations, and in Christopher Barzak's surreal "Smoke City," about an urban industrial hell. Readers who enjoy steampunk largely for its visual aesthetic or use in other genres like YA and mystery may find less appeal in a collection geared mostly toward hardcore devotees.