Author: Bruce Hesselbach
Genre: Steampunk
When it comes to writing book reviews, I sometimes feel like a broken
vinyl record... or King Solomon. It seems that every review I write
contains something to the effect of "This story wasn't very original,"
or "This story was just so cliche."
"There is nothing new under the sun!"
Once in a while, though, I'm fortunate enough to come across something
that steps out of line and dares to be different... and this was one of
those books.
Perpetual Motion is a story with all the classic elements you
expect of steampunk fiction--gears and gadgets and intriguing inventions
and gorgeous architecture, to name a few--but it shakes them up, gives
them a twist, and with a generous splash of sci-fi and time travel
thrown in you get a highly original, thoroughly engrossing novel that is
unlike anything you've ever read before.
The author starts off with a setting that, as far as I know, is
completely unique to the steampunk genre thus far in its short history:
Germany, shortly before the dawn of WWI. From there he keeps the
originality coming non-stop, but I don't want to say too much lest I
give something away. ; )
This is a coming-of-age story, an adventure story, a family story, a
love story. But more importantly, it is a story of ideas and worldviews.
The author does a brilliant job portraying the progression of what
start out simply as different points of view, as they grow in different
directions and become much more serious--matters of morality, of
destiny, opinions that could change the face and history of an entire
planet.
The most fascinating aspect of this is when you, the reader, realize
that you're seeing what is probably a very accurate picture of how and
what people thought of real issues and events at that time, before they
led into what we now know as WWI. With our modern, 20-20 hindsight, it's
easy for us to decide what was right and what was wrong in the days
before the Great War. But for the people actually living there, it might
not have been so easy to tell, and this book offers a stunning
hypothetical look into that struggle.
Another interesting aspect of Perpetual Motion was the way in
which the author presents the viewpoints of the various characters. As I
said, this is a coming-of-age story, and it is written from the
first-person perspective of a teenaged girl who has found herself
involved in a very complex world filled with many opposing ideas.
Everyone she talks to presents their ideas and worldviews as truth, and
the author offers no comment on who may or may not be lying or
misguided. It is left to the viewpoint character (and, thereby, the
reader) to try and determine what really is the truth and what is not.
Needless to say, this isn't a book you can just lightly skim over and
still have a good grasp on the story. This is a book that needs careful
attention and demands a lot of thought. That isn't to say that it
doesn't tell a good story--on the contrary, it tells a fantastic story
sure to delight steampunk fans--but it's a story completely saturated
with meaning and thought-provoking ideas. I gladly give it a high
recommendation--plus bonus points for being unique. ; )
Click Here to order Perpetual Motion on Amazon.
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