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Showing posts from August, 2013

Stark Munro, 13 Days, and Master of the World

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The Master of the World Jules Verne 4 out of 5 stars A sequel to Robur the Conqueror , this 1904 Verne novel is centered on one of his classic themes: a vulnerable public terrorized by unknown and indisputably more powerful technology.  Here, U.S. lawman John Strock is sent to investigate "the Great Eyrie," in what becomes a sort of Americanized version of 20,000 Leagues .  Though it is hardly one of Verne's best, The Master of the World takes you into Verne's world with very little cumbersome prose, and I found it to be a rather fun read (and the Niagara Falls scene was truly exciting!). The Stark Munro Letters Sir Arthur Conan Doyle 4 out of 5 stars This interesting, often humorous series of letters can be best read as a fictional Doyle memoir, based on some real events in his early medical career.  For the medical side, read Round the Red Lamp - for the personal side, read this book.  Doyle fans will like it, as will anybody researching late Victorian life.  I w

Steampunk/Sci-Fi Reading List

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✓ The Master of the World (Verne) - On Basilisk Station (Honor Harrington #1, Weber) ✓ The First Men in the Moon (Wells) - The Sea Wolf (London) - Frankenstein (Shelley) - Dracula's Guest (Stoker) - The Jewel of Seven Stars (Stoker) - The Night Land (Hodgson) - The Purple Cloud (M. P. Shiel) - Arthur Mervyn (Ch. Brockden Brown) - The Doings of Raffles Haw (Doyle) ✓ The Stark Munro Letters (Doyle) - The Maracot Deep (Doyle) - The Tragedy of the Korosko (Doyle) - The Man Who Was Thursday (Chesterton, re-read)