Nicky's Reviews > Infernal Devices

Infernal Devices by K.W. Jeter
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really liked it
bookshelves: speculative-fiction, steampunk, robots, historical-fiction-alternatehistory

I've had this book vaguely on my mental list of books that might be interesting for a long time, but I picked it up on pure whim. I'm interested in how many low reviews it has: I think the problem is that people expect something great and marvelously written from the book that inaugurated such a huge cultural phenomenon as steampunk. It's not that. It's fun, silly, often ridiculous, and in no way intended to be taken too seriously, I think.

It's a juxtaposition of ideas, written very much in the tradition of Jules Verne and H.G. Wells and with a protagonist that reminds me very much of the common mental image of bumbling, unintelligent John Watson. (Which usually ignores that he is a doctor, an army man, and capable of handling fire arms, not to mention trusted by Holmes who is obviously no idiot. He has a certain lack of imagination, yes, but he's not as stupid as the stereotype would have you believe -- and certainly not as stupid as the protagonist of this novel.)

I thought it was fun, and actually pretty absorbing. Not convincing as anything serious, but fun. I'm glad Angry Robot republished it, it's been a nice diversion from waiting for the slow wheels of the NHS to turn.
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Quotes Nicky Liked

K.W. Jeter
“And if I were to open you up - would you see anything less remarkable? Less intricately dazzling, in its squelching, spongy way? Lungs and heart and spleen, and all the rest - ticking away, as it were? Yet you walk down the boulevard, and pass any number of such wonderful devices, all ticking away as they walk, and think it no great marvel.”
K.W. Jeter, Infernal Devices


Reading Progress

August 3, 2011 – Shelved
April 6, 2013 – Started Reading
April 6, 2013 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-4 of 4 (4 new)

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message 1: by Robert (new)

Robert Was it really this book which started Steampunk? I was told it was The Difference Engine by William Gibson which did that - but I never checked whether that was true. (I tried to read the Difference Engine but found it very tedious)


Nicky Well, there were some books that fit the genre beforehand, but Jeter coined the term, and The Difference Engine was somewhat later.


message 3: by Robert (new)

Robert Cool. Learnt something today, thanks!

I'd only ever heard of K.W. Jeter as "the guy who wrote the Blade Runner sequels" - I had no idea he is actually an influential genre-defining writer.


message 4: by Al (new) - added it

Al Gibson is more associated with cyberpunk I think, which is basically steampunk in the digital age. He coined the term cyberspace with his novel Neuromancer.


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