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THE LAZARUS MACHINE

From the Tweed & Nightingale series , Vol. 1

Too complicated to engage.

A series opener, Crilley’s steampunk adventure follows an unlikely duo to the underworld of Victorian London.

Coldly rational and from the bad part of town, Tweed is 17 when his father is kidnapped. Headstrong and highborn, Octavia is about the same age, only her mother has been missing a year, so she has had more time to gather facts on the likely culprits. A nebulous Ministry is at the center of their suspicions, as are the resurrected characters of Professor Moriarty and Sherlock Holmes and a nefarious mastermind. Octavia’s father turns a blind eye to her comings and goings, and Tweed has no mother, but the two receive help from a mildly entertaining couple Tweed and his father know. This seemingly low-bred pair of lovebirds adds one of the few human touches to a story that is too full of gadgets and machinations for most readers to keep track of. The primary action of the book is a break-in at the Ministry beneath London that Tweed and Octavia execute with success, only to find all is not what they expected. Though the style of writing is simple and engaging enough, the story itself goes in too many directions to follow, leaving open too many loose ends for readers to know exactly what they are looking for in the next installment.

Too complicated to engage. (Steampunk. 12 & up)

Pub Date: Nov. 6, 2012

ISBN: 978-1-61614-688-7

Page Count: 280

Publisher: Pyr/Prometheus Books

Review Posted Online: Sept. 14, 2012

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 2012

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THE DIVINERS

From the Diviners series , Vol. 1

Not for the faint of heart due to both subject and length, but the intricate plot and magnificently imagined details of...

1920s New York thrums with giddy life in this gripping first in a new trilogy from Printz winner Bray.

Irrepressible 17-year-old Evie delights in her banishment to her Uncle Will’s care in Manhattan after she drunkenly embarrasses a peer in her Ohio hometown. She envisions glamour, fun and flappers, but she gets a great deal more in the bargain. Her uncle, the curator of a museum of the occult, is soon tapped to help solve a string of grisly murders, and Evie, who has long concealed an ability to read people’s pasts while holding an object of their possession, is eager to assist. An impressively wide net is cast here, sprawling to include philosophical Uncle Will and his odd assistant, a numbers runner and poet who dreams of establishing himself among the stars of the Harlem Renaissance, a beautiful and mysterious dancer on the run from her past and her kind musician roommate, a slick-talking pickpocket, and Evie’s seemingly demure sidekick, Mabel. Added into the rotation of third-person narrators are the voices of those encountering a vicious, otherworldly serial killer; these are utterly terrifying.

Not for the faint of heart due to both subject and length, but the intricate plot and magnificently imagined details of character, dialogue and setting take hold and don’t let go. Not to be missed. (Historical/paranormal thriller. 14 & up)

Pub Date: Sept. 18, 2012

ISBN: 978-0-316-12611-3

Page Count: 608

Publisher: Little, Brown

Review Posted Online: July 17, 2012

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2012

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THE CITY BEAUTIFUL

A slow-moving but compelling tale of a queer Jewish boy battling antisemitism and the supernatural.

Young immigrant Alter Rosen lives in Chicago; it’s 1893, and the World’s Fair is in town.

Seventeen-year-old Alter longs to enjoy everything the White City has to offer him, but as a Romanian refugee in the United States, he feels it is his responsibility to earn enough money to bring his mother and his sisters over from Europe. Jewish people in the Russian empire have long been the targets and victims of government-sanctioned violence, and while life in the U.S. is still not ideal for Jews, it’s much safer. So, Alter tries his best to make an honest living and save his money. But when several Jewish boys from the tenements on Maxwell Street, where he has rented a room, end up missing or dead—including Alter’s own roommate and secret crush, Yakov—Alter knows he has to find out the truth about their fates. A highly detailed historical landscape paired with the fantastical element of the dybbuk from ancient Jewish folklore, one of whom possesses Alter, provide a solid base for the book’s leisurely paced and original narrative. Readers will become immersed in Alter’s world, rooting for his survival, hoping for his reunion with his family, and wishing for him to find the love that he deserves. An author’s note and glossary add valuable context. Main characters are White and Jewish.

A slow-moving but compelling tale of a queer Jewish boy battling antisemitism and the supernatural. (Historical thriller. 13-18)

Pub Date: Oct. 5, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-335-40250-9

Page Count: 480

Publisher: Inkyard Press

Review Posted Online: June 23, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2021

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