Punking Fiction Part 1: Steampunk Reading List

Updated: September 30, 2010

First up in this series of ‘punked’ literature book recommendation lists is…

The Steampunk Genre – A Quick Intro

Personally, I think Victorian fantasies are going to be the next big thing, as long as we can come up with a fitting collective term for Powers, Blaylock and myself. Something based on the appropriate technology of the era; like “steampunks,” perhaps…

- K.W. Jeter, from letter to Locus magazine, April 1987

Steampunk Definition from the Urban Dictionary:

Steampunk is a subgenre of speculative fiction, usually set in an anachronistic Victorian or quasi-Victorian alternate history setting. It could be described by the slogan “What the past would look like if the future had happened sooner.” It includes fiction with science fiction, fantasy or horror themes.

Also Called:

Retro-futurism (MY favorite); Victorian Science Fiction; Gaslight Fantasy; Clockpunk or Clockworkpunk.

Sub-Culture of Steam

“Steampunk” is also a costuming and crafting sub-culture. The costumes are based on Victorian attire with a liberal dusting of top hats, goggles, and gears. The crafting varies from jewelry to digital art to computer modding to functional flights of steam-powered mechanical fancy.

Proto-steampunk

Utopian flying machines of the previous century, France, 1890-1900What we call “steampunk” today was formalized by the works of Tim Powers, James Blaylock, and K.W. Jeter. However, they weren’t the first ones to write speculative works of Victorian fantasy. Appropriately enough, the early science fiction romances of the Victorians themselves set the stage initially.

The 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s saw further refinement of the developing genre that Jeter latter dubbed “steampunk” in 1987. Joan Aiken is one of the early architects of the genre. As is the ’60s TV show Wild Wild West. (LOVE this show; I Heart Artemis Gordon!)

Major Proto-steampunk Works

Sub-sub Genres

The steampunk category has it’s own sub-genre. Here’s a quick and very dirty list; these ‘flavors’ are taste driven and not official marketing monikers:

Atompunk

Speculative fiction in an antiquated setting with atomic power.

Etherpunk

Also called ‘cyberpunk victoriana’. Steampunk with digital technology, space travel, or ether-based cyber space. The tabletop roleplaying game Etherscope is a good example.

Dieselpunk

Speculative fiction that’s a mashup of steampunk and cyberpunk tropes with a mid-century pulp adventure feel and diesel fuel based technology.

Industrial/Modern Steampunk

Takes place in the late-industrial or early-modern ages. Sometimes set in World War I or II.

Medieval Steampunk

Speculative fiction that uses the steampunk ethos but that is set in a medieval time period instead of the 1800s.

Victorian Steampunk

The default style of the genre.

Weird West

Also called ‘western steampunk’. This is that classic mix of science fiction and the Old West that’s the literary equivalent of peanut butter & chocolate. 1960s television classic The Wild, Wild West is the epitome of this category.

NOTE: There is overlap in the horror genre with this term, where it originated, and is used to mean horror or supernatural fiction in an Old West setting. All the permutations of this special little cross-genre delight that is Weird West is covered more in my Crossing Genres Part 1: Weird West reading list.

Steampunk Recommended Reading List

Looking to read something in the steampunk category? Here’s a list of highly recommended books and graphic novels in this speculative fiction sub-genre.

 

A

The Adventures of Langdon St. Ives by James P. Blaylock

This omnibus volume contains the collected Steampunk stories and novels of James P. Blaylock, one of the originators of the genre, which hearkens back to the worlds of Jules Verne and H.G. Wells, a world where science was a work of the imagination, and the imagination was endlessly free to dream.

From the depths of the Borneo jungles to the starlit reaches of outer space, and ultimately through the dark corridors of past and future time, the adventures of Langdon St. Ives invariably lead him back to the streets and alleys of the most secretive city in the world – London in the age of steam and gaslamps. St. Ives, in pursuit of the infamous Dr. Ignacio Narbondo, discovers the living horror of revivified corpses, the deep sea mystery of a machine with the power to drag ships to their doom…

Read? Not yet; it’s on my To-Check-Out shelf on GoodReads.

  • Author(s): James P. Blaylock
  • ISBN#: 9781596061705

The Affinity Bridge by George Mann

Welcome to the bizarre and dangerous world of Victorian London, a city teetering on the edge of revolution. Its people are ushering in a new era of technology, dazzled each day by new inventions. But this shiny veneer of progress hides a world where ghostly policemen haunt the fog-laden alleyways of Whitechapel, where cadavers can rise from the dead. And where Sir Maurice Newbury, Gentleman Investigator for the Crown, works tirelessly to protect the Empire from her foes.

When an airship crashes in mysterious circumstances, Sir Maurice and his recently appointed assistant Miss Veronica Hobbes are called in to investigate. Meanwhile, Scotland Yard is baffled by a spate of grisly murders and a terrifying plague is ravaging the slums of the city.

Read? Not yet; it’s on my To-Check-Out shelf on GoodReads.

Review @ The Mad Hatter’s

Airborn by Kenneth Oppel

Matt Cruse is a cabin boy on the Aurora, a huge airship that sails hundreds of feet above the ocean, ferrying wealthy passengers from city to city. It is the life Matt’s always wanted; convinced he’s lighter than air, he imagines himself as buoyant as the hydrium gas that powers his ship. One night he meets a dying balloonist who speaks of beautiful creatures drifting through the skies. It is only after Matt meets the balloonist’s granddaughter that he realizes that the man’s ravings may, in fact, have been true, and that the creatures are completely real and utterly mysterious.

In a swashbuckling adventure reminiscent of Jules Verne and Robert Louis Stevenson, Kenneth Oppel, author of the best-selling Silverwing trilogy, creates an imagined world in which the air is populated by transcontinental voyagers, pirates, and beings never before dreamed of by the humans who sail the skies.

Read? No.

Review @ The Book Smugglers

  • Publisher(s): Eos
  • Copyright: 2004

The Alchemy of Stone by Ekaterina Sedia

Mattie, an intelligent automaton skilled in the use of alchemy, finds herself caught in the middle of a conflict between gargoyles, the Mechanics, and the Alchemists. With the old order quickly giving way to the new, Mattie discovers powerful and dangerous secrets – secrets that can completely alter the balance of power in the city of Ayona. However, this doesn’t sit well with Loharri, the Mechanic who created Mattie and still has the key to her heart – literally!

Read? Not yet; it’s on my To-Check-Out shelf on GoodReads.

Review @ Janicus’ Book Blog

The Amazing Screw-On Head by Mike Mignola

Yes, even the creator of the world’s greatest supernatural investigator needs a break once in a while, and when Mike Mignola tires (however briefly) of a steady diet of Hellboy, he turns to diversions such as The Amazing Screw-On Head! When Emperor Zombie threatens the safety of all life on Earth, President Abraham Lincoln enlists the aid of a mechanical head. With Screw-On Head and Mr. Groin on the job, you just know there will be flying machines to be piloted, tombs to be robbed, and weird alien menaces to be thwarted — all that and talking dogs, too! It’s pure mayhem — and pure Mignola!

Read? Not yet; it’s on my To-Check-Out shelf on GoodReads.

Review @ Read About Comics

  • Author(s): Mike Mignola

Arcadia Snips and the Steamwork Consortium by Robert Rodgers

In an era of bygone anachronisms and steam-powered ambulatory engines, a sharp-witted street-thief with a heart of semi-precious metal finds herself locked in a battle of wits against a secret plot to bring the city she loves to its knees. Arcadia will need to enlist the help of a reformed mad scientist, a stern suffragette, and a persnickety pigeon to unravel the mysterious past of the Steamwork Consortium – and stop the cabal of sinister mathematicians who would use that past to destroy all of Aberwick.

Arcadia Snips and the Steamwork Consortium is both a cautionary tale against reckless mathematics and an accurate historical account all rolled up into one. In fact, the story is so accurate that you might consider it more of a history lecture than an illustrated novel.

Read? Not yet; it’s on my To-Check-Out shelf on GoodReads.

Review @ BOOKVISIONS

 

B

Boneshaker by Cherie Priest

In the early days of the Civil War, rumors of gold in the frozen Klondike brought hordes of newcomers to the Pacific Northwest. Anxious to compete, Russian prospectors commissioned inventor Leviticus Blue to create a great machine that could mine through Alaska’s ice. Thus was Dr. Blue’s Incredible Bone-Shaking Drill Engine born. But on its first test run the Boneshaker went terribly awry, destroying several blocks of downtown Seattle and unearthing a subterranean vein of blight gas that turned anyone who breathed it into the living dead.

Now it is sixteen years later, and a wall has been built to enclose the devastated and toxic city. Just beyond it lives Blue’s widow, Briar Wilkes. Life is hard with a ruined reputation and a teenaged boy to support, but she and Ezekiel are managing. Until Ezekiel undertakes a secret crusade to rewrite history. His quest will take him under the wall and into a city teeming with ravenous undead, air pirates, criminal overlords, and heavily armed refugees. And only Briar can bring him out alive.

Read? Not yet; it’s on my To-Check-Out shelf on GoodReads.

Review @ Stainless Steel Droppings

 

C

Calamity Jack by Shannon & Dean Hale w/Nathan Hale (illustrator)

Jack thinks of himself as a criminal mastermind with an unfortunate amount of bad luck. A schemer, a trickster …maybe even a thief? But, of course, he’s not out for himself he’s trying to take the burden off his hardworking mum’s shoulders. She’d understand, right? He hopes she might even be proud. Then, one day, Jack chooses a target a little more …’giant’ than the usual, and as one little bean turns into a great big building-destroying beanstalk, his troubles really begin. But with help from Rapunzel and other eccentric friends, Jack just might out-swindle the evil giants and put his beloved city back in the hands of the people who live there …whilst catapulting them and the reader into another fantastical adventure.

A steampunk western re-telling of Jack and the Beanstalk, with assistance from heroine Rapunzel who uses her hair as a lasso and whip. YA graphic novel.

Read? Not yet; it’s on my To-Check-Out shelf on GoodReads.

Review @ Graphic Novel Reporter

  • Author(s): Shannon & Dean Hale with Nathan Hale (illustrator)
  • ISBN#: 9781599900766
  • Publisher(s): Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Copyright: 2010

Clockwork Heart by Dru Pagliassotti

A steampunkish romantic fantasy set in Ondinium, a city that beats to the ticking of a clockwork heart. Taya, a metal-winged courier, can travel freely across the city’s sectors and mingle indiscriminately among its castes. A daring mid-air rescue leads to involvement with two scions of an upperclass family and entanglement in a web of terrorism, loyalty, murder, and secrets.

Read? Not yet; it’s on my To-Check-Out shelf on GoodReads.

Review @ Fantasy Debut

  • Publisher(s): Juno Books
  • Copyright: 2008

 

D

Daisy Kutter: The Last Train by Kazu Kibuishi

Daisy Kutter’s bandit days are behind her. She and partner Tom have gone legit, and now she is a respectable small-town citizen, owner of the local general store–and bored out of her mind. Frustration with the tedium of normal life and her own discontents gets her into trouble after she loses the store in a poker game. Mr. Winters, the security mogul who won it, offers a proposition she can’t refuse: to test the new security robots on his train. He is willing to pay. In a fit of recklessness, Daisy takes the job.

Steampunky sci-fi Western. Collects all four issues of Daisy Kutter.

Read? Not yet, but I’ve checked it out from the library this month.

Review @ Comics Bulletin

  • Author(s): Kazu Kibuishi
  • ISBN#: 9780975419328
  • Publisher(s): Viper Comics
  • Copyright: 2005

The Difference Engine by William Gibson & Bruce Sterling

A collaborative novel from the premier cyberpunk authors, William Gibson and Bruce Sterling. Part detective story, part historical thriller, The Difference Engine takes us not forward but back, to an imagined 1885: the Industrial Revolution is in full and inexorable swing, powered by steam-driven, cybernetic engines. Charles Babbage perfects his Analytical Engine, and the computer age arrives a century ahead of its time.

Read? No.

Review @ Infinity Plus

  • Author(s): William Gibson & Bruce Sterling
  • ISBN#: 780575600294
  • Publisher(s): Gollancz
  • Copyright: 1990, 1996

Doctor Grordbort’s Contrapulatronic Dingus Directory by Greg Broadmore

By jingo, by crikey, and by all that’s good in this world, he’s done it! Dr. Grordbort has released his directory of scientific splendor. A catalogue of wondrous contraptions and wave weapons of unprecedented power, this book makes available a myriad of destructive and beneficial devices to any intergalactic explorer: Rayguns, Metal Men, Ironclads, and Rocketships are all presented. Also included is a sequential pictographic essay (also known as a “comic”) on the exploits of world-famous naturalist and adventurer Lord Cockswain. See him uncover the natural mysteries of Venus with several big guns!

Satirical steampunk contraption ‘catalog’ graphic novel done up like a real Victorian era merchant’s brochure. I particularly like the Lazoplod. The book is inspired by a WETA Limited brochure put out in 2007 that presented their ray gun ‘statues’ this way as the catalog of Doctor Grordbort.

Read? Yes

  • Author(s): Greg Broadmore
  • ISBN#: 9781593078768
  • Publisher(s): Dark Horse
  • Copyright: 2008

 

F

Fitzpatrick’s War by Theodore Judson

In the twenty-sixth century the world is a very different place. The United States and Canada are gone, replaced by the socially rigid, authoritarian Confederacy of the Yukon. Also gone is the electronic age-destroyed in the apocalyptic Storm Times. It is now, once again, an age of steam, an age of lighter-than-air craft.

Fitzpatrick’s War is the intimate memoir of Sir Robert Bruce, a close companion of Fitzpatrick the Younger, the greatest hero of the Yukons. Yukon History paints Fitzpatrick as a latter-day Alexander the Great, and calls Bruce a lying traitor. Was Robert Bruce a degenerate scoundrel…or the only man to tell his world the truth?

Read? No.

Review @ Everyday Wonder

  • Author(s): Theodore Judson
  • ISBN#: 9780756402716
  • Publisher(s): DAW
  • Copyright: 2005, 2004

 

G

Girl Genius by Phil & Kaja Foglio

In a time when the Industrial Revolution has become an all-out war, Mad Science rules the World… with mixed success. At Transylvania Polygnostic University, Agatha Clay is a student with trouble concentrating and rotten luck. Dedicated to her studies but unable to build anything that actually works, she seems destined for a lackluster career as a minor lab assistant. But when the University is overthrown, a strange “clank” stalks the streets and it begins to look like Agatha might carry a spark of Mad Science after all.

Read? No.

Review @ Comics Worth Reading

  • Author(s): Phil & Kaja Foglio
  • ISBN#: 9781890856199

Grandville: A Detective LeBrock Scientific Romance Thriller by Bryan Talbot

Two hundred years ago, Britain lost the Napoleonic War and fell under the thumb of French domination. Gaining independence after decades of civil disobedience and anarchist bombings, the Socialist Republic of Britain is now a small, unimportant backwater connected by a railway bridge, steam-powered dirigible, and mutual suspicion to France. When a British diplomat is murdered to look like suicide, ferocious Detective-Inspector LeBrock of Scotland Yard stalks a ruthless murder squad through the heart of a Belle Epoque Paris, the center of the greatest empire in a world of steam-driven hansom cabs, automatons, and flying machines. LeBrock’s relentless quest can lead only to death, truth… or war.

Anthorphomrophic steampunk police noir from the creator of The Adventures of Luther Arkwright and One Bad Rat.

Read? Not yet; it’s on my To-Check-Out shelf on GoodReads.

Review @ downthetubes.net

  • Author(s): Bryan Talbot
  • ISBN#: 9781595823977

 

H

Homunculus by James P. Blaylock

A fascinating trip to a London that never existed … but perhaps should have. Darkly atmospheric, Homonculus weaves together the stories of Narbondo – a mad hunchback who works tirelessly to bring the dead back to life, of the members of the Trismegistus Club – a surly group of scientists and philosophers who meet at Captain Powers’ Pipe Shop, and of the homonculus – a tiny man whose powers can drive men to murder.

One of the three works that helped form the foundation of what we call steampunk today.

Read? No.

  • Author(s): James P. Blaylock
  • ISBN#: 9781930235137
  • Publisher(s): Babbage Press
  • Copyright: 2000, 1986

 

I

Infernal devices: A mad Victorian fantasy by K.W. Jeter

It all began when the Brown Leather Man, a mysterious being with a secret older than humankind, asked proper Victorian London gentleman George Dower to repair a weird device. How could George have known that this was but one of the many infernal devices his genius father had built, and that he himself would soon be pursued by former clients of his father? For George had always been the unsuspecting key to his father’s incredible plans, a key that others would like to possess – from the automaton who wore George’s own face to the mad Lord Bendray, bent on using George to destroy the entire Earth.

Read? No.

Review @ BSC

  • Author(s): K.W. Jeter
  • ISBN#: 9780586073452
  • Publisher(s): Grafton Bks
  • Copyright: 1987

Iron West by Doug TenNapel

Preston Struck is an incompetent outlaw with a heart of fool’s gold. He discovers an army of metal men bent on destroying central California. While Struck avoids any form of heroism, he gets a little help from a magical old shaman and his sidekick Sasquatch. Struck is going to need all the help he can get because he’s deputized just as the mechanical men have taken over the railroad and are mutating the train into a giant demonic iron monster.

Read? Not yet; I’ve got to wait until all the comics in the series are gathered into a single graphic novel volume.

Review @ Numbmonkey

  • Author(s): Doug TenNapel
  • ISBN#: 9780575600294
  • Publisher(s): Image Comics
  • Copyright: 1990, 1996

 

L

The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen by Moore & O’Neill (illustrator)

In this amazingly imaginative tale, literary figures from throughout time and various bodies of work are brought together to face any and all threats to Britain. Allan Quartermain, Mina Murray, Captain Nemo, Dr. Henry Jekyll and Edward Hyde and Hawley Griffin, the Invisible Man, form a remarkable legion of intellectual aptitude and physical prowess. Presented in this trade paperback is the League’s first adventure together, from their initial recruitment to their heroic victory. Also included in this volume is the illustrator’s masterful sketchbook, which gives unique behind-the-scenes insight to the artistic process.

Read? No.

Review @ Comics Bulletin

  • Author(s): Alan Moore & Kevin O’Neill (illustrator)
  • ISBN#: 9781563898587

Leviathan by Scott Westerfeld

Prince Aleksander, would-be heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne, is on the run. His own people have turned on him. His title is worthless. All he has is a battletorn war machine and a loyal crew of men.

Deryn Sharp is a commoner, disguised as a boy in the British Air Service. She’s a brilliant airman. But her secret is in constant danger of being discovered.

With World War I brewing, Alek and Deryn’s paths cross in the most unexpected way – taking them on a fantastical, around-the-world adventure that will change both their lives forever.

Read? Not yet; it’s on my To-Check-Out shelf on GoodReads.

Review @ Neth Space

 

M

Mainspring by Jay Lake

Lake has envisioned a clockwork solar system, where the planets move in a vast system of gears around the lamp of the Sun. It is a universe where the hand of the Creator is visible to anyone who simply looks up into the sky, and sees the track of the heavens, the wheels of the Moon, and the great Equatorial gears of the Earth itself. A young clockmaker’s apprentice is visited by the Archangel Gabriel and e is told that he must take the Key Perilous and rewind the Mainspring of the Earth. It is running down, and disaster to the planet will ensue if it’s not rewound. From innocence and ignorance to power and self-knowledge, the young man will make the long and perilous journey to the South Polar Axis, to fulfill the commandment of his God.

Read? No.

Review @ Only The Best Science Fiction and Fantasy

  • Author(s): Jay Lake
  • ISBN#: 9780765317087
  • Publisher(s): Tor Books
  • Copyright: 2007

Mortal Engines by Philip Reeve

The great traction city London is on the move again. It has been lying low, skulking in the hills to avoid the bigger, faster, hungrier cities loose in the Great Hunting Ground. Thaddeus Valentine, London’s Head Historian and most famous archaeologist, and his daughter, Katherine, are down in The Gut when a young assassin strikes. Only the quick intervention of Tom, a lowly third-class apprentice, prevents Valentine from being stabbed in the heart. Madly racing after the fleeing girl, Tom suddenly glimpses her hideous face: scarred from forehead to jaw, nose a smashed stump, a single eye glaring back at him. “Look at what your Valentine did to me!” she screams. “Ask him! Ask him what he did to Hester Shaw!” And with that she jumps down the waste chute to her death. Minutes later Tom finds himself tumbling down the same chute and stranded in the Out-Country, a sea of mud scored by the huge caterpillar tracks of cities like the one now steaming off over the horizon.

Read? Not yet; it’s on my To-Check-Out shelf on GoodReads.

Review @ Reading Matters

  • Publisher(s): EOS
  • Copyright: 2004

 

N

Newton’s Cannon by Greg Keyes

Come on a journey sideways through time, and lose yourself in a world both deeply familiar and wondrously strange. In 1681, Sir Isaac Newton turns his restless mind to the ancient art of alchemy, and successfully unleashes Philosopher’s Mercury, the key to manipulating the four elements. Powerful kings will battle to control it, till London itself is threatened with obliteration by a hellish device – unless a pair of unlikely geniuses can defuse it in time. This is a fantasy woven from the stuff of history, an enthralling quest whose outcome may raise humanity to unparalleled heights…or bring down the curtain of endless night.

First book in the Age of Unreason series.

Read? No.

Review @ Some Fantastic

  • Author(s): Greg Keyes
  • ISBN#: 9780330419970
  • Publisher(s): Tor
  • Copyright: 2004, 1998

 

P

Perdido Street Station by China Miéville

Beneath the towering bleached ribs of a dead, ancient beast lies New Crobuzon, a squalid city where humans, Re-mades, and arcane races live in perpetual fear of Parliament and its brutal militia. The air and rivers are thick with factory pollutants and the strange effluents of alchemy, and the ghettos contain a vast mix of workers, artists, spies, junkies, and whores. In New Crobuzon, the unsavory deal is stranger to none—not even to Isaac, a brilliant scientist with a penchant for Crisis Theory.

I list this book here because many consider it etherpunk or plain steampunk, though I doubt Miéville himself would use those labels. Personally, I prefer his own self-applied ‘genre’ term of “New Weird”.

Read? No.

I’ve read The Scar, though, which is set in the same world, only on a floating pirate city. My husband’s read it, so it’s there on the shelf for me to eventually get to when ever I magange to get to the bottom of my constantly expanding To-Check-Out list.

Review @ The Accidental Bard

  • Publisher(s): Del Rey
  • Copyright: 2004, 2002

The Peshawar Lancers by S.M. Stirling

In the mid-1870s, civilization froze in time when comets hit the earth. Instead of advancing technologically, humanity had to piece itself back together. In the 21st century, boats still run on steam, messages are delivered by telegraph, and the British Empire controls much of the world from its capital in Delhi. The other major world power is the Czar of Russia—who is preparing for global conquest.

Read? No.

Review @ SF Site

  • Publisher(s): Roc
  • Copyright: 2003, 2002

 

R

Robotika by Alex Sheikman 

Niko, the Steampunk Samurai, is in her Majesty’s service. But is he a faithful royal bodyguard, or a for-hire yojimbo? A perfect warrior, or a soulless weapon? Follow Niko on his journey of self-discovery with Uri Bronski and Cherokee Geisha, as the Three Yojimbo discover a world populated by silent samurai, fast talking geisha, deadly mechabetsushikime, digital djihits and morphing butterflies.

Read? Yes. I love it! This is one of my favorite graphic novels. It’s like an ether western with a little cyberpunk seasoning. VERY cross-genre and wonderful. Read my review here.

  • Publisher(s): Archaia
  • Copyright: 2006

 

S

Souless by Gail Carriger

Alexia Tarabotti is laboring under a great many social tribulations. First, she has no soul. Second, she’s a spinster whose father is both Italian and dead. Third, she was rudely attacked by a vampire, breaking all standards of social etiquette.

Things go from bad to worse when Alexia accidentally kills the vampire and, appalling, Lord Maccon (loud, messy, gorgeous, and werewolf) is sent by Queen Victoria to investigate. With unexpected vampires appearing and expected vampires disappearing, everyone seems to believe Alexia responsible. Can she figure out what is actually happening to London’s high society? Finally, who is the real enemy, and do they have treacle tart?

Read? Yes; read my review.

  • Publisher(s): Orbit Books (a Hachette imprint)
  • Copyright: 2009

Steampunk edited by Ann & Jeff VanderMeer

Replete with whimsical mechanical wonders and charmingly anachronistic settings, this pioneering anthology gathers a brilliant blend of fantastical stories. Steampunk originates in the romantic elegance of the Victorian era and blends in modern scientific advances – synthesizing imaginative technologies such as steam-driven robots, analog supercomputers, and ultramodern dirigibles. The elegant allure of this popular new genre is represented in this rich collection by distinctively talented authors, including Neal Stephenson, Michael Chabon, James Blaylock, Michael Moorcock, and Joe R. Lansdale.

Anthology of steampunk short stories

Read? No.

Review @ OF Blog of the Fallen

  • Author(s): Ann & Jeff VanderMeer
  • ISBN#: 9781568581026
  • Publisher(s): Four Walls Eight Windows
  • Copyright: 1995, 1996

The Steampunk Trilogy by Paul Di Filippo

Queen Victoria as a trollop-in-training whose newt-human clone serves as stand-in during Victoria’s trysts? Walt Whitman as lusty seducer of an only partly reticent Emily Dickinson who loses the “Keys to the Inner Chambers of her Heart” to him?

This fine and funny madness is “steampunk,” a branch of cyberpunk fiction that locates itself in historical venues rather than in the future. Paul Di Filippo has certainly done his homework: the settings as well as the language emulate the times and, in Dickinson’s and Whitman’s cases, their poetic language, which asserts itself into their conversational dialogue and thoughts at most unusual but appropriate moments.

Read? Not yet; it’s on my To-Check-Out shelf on GoodReads.

Review @ SF Site

  • Author(s): Paul Di Filippo
  • ISBN#: 9781568581026
  • Publisher(s): Four Walls Eight Windows
  • Copyright: 1995, 1996

 

T

Time Lincoln by Fred Perry

In his last hour, he lived a lifetime!

What happens when the Great Emancipator is suddenly freed from the bonds of time to right wrongs throughout history? On the night of his assassination, Abraham Lincoln’s life is threatened not by an angry actor, but by Void Stalin, the man who is literally the greatest villain of all time! Somehow, Lincoln is destined to wage war upon Void Stalin’s forces of evil in the past, present and future, and the time-traveling tyrant is determined to make sure that never comes to pass!

Etherpunk starring everyone’s favarite stove-pipe hat wearing United States President.

Read? No

Review @ Manga Life

  • Author(s): Fred Perry

Trigun by Yasuhiro Nightow

Far-future set western + sci-fi manga that inspired a hit anime.

Somehow the past has placed a sixty billion double dollar bounty on Vash’s head, and the gun slinging pacifist can’t seem to get away from money grabbing, itchy-trigger-finger citizenry. Find out why Vash is worth so much dead!

A great weird-west steampunk graphic novel from Japan. It has that perfect blend of silly and serious that the Japanese do so well.

Read? No, but I’ve seen the whole anime series (which is SWEEEETTT!!).

Review @ Manga Life

  • Author(s): Yasuhiro Nightow
  • ISBN#: 9781593070526
  • Publisher(s): Dark Horse Manga
  • Copyright: 2003 (that’s for DH’s English translation)

 

W

Warlord of the Air by Michael Moorcock

Suppose that a few of our present inventions had been made earlier, and others not discovered at all? How would the last century have evolved differently?

This is the story of Oswald Bastable, a Victorian captain who found himself in such alternate worlds. It is based on notes handed down to Michael Moorcock from his great-grandfather. It’s a story of a world of empires secured by airships, and a Chinese genius who invented the means of overthrowing the West’s power!

Read? Not yet; it’s on my To-Check-Out shelf on GoodReads.

Review @ The Book Smuglers

  • Author(s): Michael Moorcock
  • ISBN#: 9780879973803
  • Publisher(s): DAW
  • Copyright: 1978, 1971

Whitechapel Gods by S.M. Peters

Two In Victorian London, the Whitechapel section is a mechanized, steam-driven hell, cut off and ruled by two mysterious, mechanical gods-Mama Engine and Grandfather Clock. Some years have passed since the Great Uprising, when humans rose up to fight against the machines, but a few brave veterans of the Uprising have formed their own Resistance-and are gathering for another attack. For now they have a secret weapon that may finally free them – or kill them all…

Read? Not yet; it’s on my To-Check-Out shelf on GoodReads.

Review @ Fantasy Book Critic

  • Author(s): S.M. Peters
  • ISBN#: 9780451461933
  • Publisher(s): Roc (Penguin imprint)
  • Copyright: 2008

Worldshaker by Richard Harland

Col lives on the Upper Decks of the juggernaut Worldshaker, a mobile city as big as a mountain. He has been chosen as next Supreme Commander – but then a girl, Filthy, escapes from Below and appeares in his cabin. “Don’t let ‘em take me!”, she begs.

Will he hand her over, or will he break all the rules? Col’s safe, elite world is about to fall apart as he learns the terrible truth about the nature of his society in this steampunk novel by Richard Harland

I saw the author, Richard Harland, talk at Mysterious Galaxy for their 2010 YA summer event. He was really interesting and his reading of the first few pages was so animated that I’ve added the book to my ever growing list of books to eventually get when I have a full-time gig again.

Read? Not yet; it’s on my list to get, though.

Review @ HorrorScope

  • Publisher(s): Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing
  • Copyright: 2008

 

Z

Zeppelins West by Joe R. Lansdale

The Wild West Show travels by Zeppelin to perform before a Shogun, soon to be emperor of Japan, only to discover the Frankenstein monster is being whittled down slowly and ground into aphrodisiacs by the would-be ruler. Buffalo Bill, who, due to a recent accident, exists only as a battery powered head in a jar of liquid manufactured from the best that modern science and pig urine has to offer, along with Wild Bill Hickok, Annie Oakley, Sitting Bull, and a cast of historical as well as literary characters, rescue the monster, only to be shot down over the Pacific, where they are saved from sharks by Captain Nemo and his intellectual seal, Ned.

And then things get weird.

Read? Not yet; it’s on my To-Check-Out shelf on GoodReads.

Review @ Steampunk Scholar

  • Publisher(s): Subterranean Press
  • Copyright: 2001

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