Forum menu
Does this book actu...
 

[Closed] Does this book actually exist or have I imagined it? Steampunk/fantasy Mievelley

Posts: 66111
Full Member
Topic starter
 
[#6092002]

Not entirely sure if I've just had a really vivid and elaborate dream, or something 😉 I could sum this up as "China Mieville's The Scar, with airship pirates instead of boat pirates". Main character gets picked up/pirated by/joins airship pirate gang, hijinks ensue, there's a big council of airship pirates after which they decide to do a thing but some of them aren't very happy about it, they fly over a scary-ass monstery desert thing in search of something (food? water? fuel?)... Then they end up getting involved in or leading a war against (or in defence of) an inexplicably conical city... Which to be frank is awfully like the pointy middle bit of Midgar in final fantasy 7 so maybe that's another component, and possibly Scott Lynch's Red Sails Under Red Skies...


 
Posted : 04/04/2014 6:39 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Not the Edge Chronicles, the childrens series?


 
Posted : 04/04/2014 6:41 pm
 AD
Posts: 1577
Full Member
 

Not a million miles away from Alistair Reynolds 'Terminal World'?


 
Posted : 04/04/2014 6:44 pm
Posts: 33970
Full Member
 

Sounds like a best-seller, Northwind, I should get writing if I were you!


 
Posted : 04/04/2014 6:56 pm
Posts: 66111
Full Member
Topic starter
 

That's the feller! Quite a few details wrong, I think I'd overwritten all the bits I didn't like with bits from other novels 😆 Cheers, that's been bugging me


 
Posted : 04/04/2014 6:59 pm
 AD
Posts: 1577
Full Member
 

Now its bugging me 🙂 which one was it? Edge Chronicles or Terminal World?


 
Posted : 04/04/2014 7:04 pm
Posts: 4686
Full Member
 

Not the 'Kitty Jay' trilogy by Chris Wooding is it..?


 
Posted : 04/04/2014 7:23 pm
Posts: 66111
Full Member
Topic starter
 

Oh sorry! Terminal World, definitely.


 
Posted : 04/04/2014 7:37 pm
 AD
Posts: 1577
Full Member
 

🙂 Thanks Northwind!


 
Posted : 04/04/2014 8:07 pm
Posts: 1075
Full Member
 

Worth a read then? I enjoyed century rain but his other sci fi offerings left me a bit cold.


 
Posted : 04/04/2014 8:09 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Sounds good (adds to booklist). Still trudging my way through the latest Hamilton trilogy.


 
Posted : 04/04/2014 8:18 pm
Posts: 66111
Full Member
Topic starter
 

It's alright. TBH from what I remember there's a really good story in it but it's kind of drowned in ideas-for-its-own-sake. Better pacing than most Reynolds (there is no 1000 page spaceship chase) Think I'll reread it and see what I'm remembering right and what I'm not!


 
Posted : 04/04/2014 8:20 pm
Posts: 91168
Free Member
 

You know this thread is going to go on for ages despite the original question having been answere conclusively.


 
Posted : 04/04/2014 8:26 pm
Posts: 2423
Free Member
 

Better pacing than most Reynolds (there is no 1000 page spaceship chase)

Being on page 3,049 of 6,628 of Mr Reynolds' Revelation Space Collection, I'm yearning for the relative brevity of Neal Stephenson...


 
Posted : 04/04/2014 8:48 pm
Posts: 13282
Free Member
 

@drlex. Yep Stephenson does try the patience. Whoever thought Cryptonomicon was tightly written? Until the next series…


 
Posted : 04/04/2014 9:11 pm
Posts: 66111
Full Member
Topic starter
 

@drlex, have you done the revelation space series before? I'm absolutely dying to do some spoilering but I'll resist, come back in 3600 pages...

Man is direly in need of an editor, and that editor is direly in need of a very big axe.


 
Posted : 04/04/2014 10:03 pm
Posts: 91168
Free Member
 

Cryptonomicon was rambling, but very tightly written ramblingness.


 
Posted : 04/04/2014 10:12 pm
Posts: 34532
Full Member
 

f--- ya'all

ill bask in reynolds techno ramblings happily, love every word of the revelation space series

terminal world and his last one not a patch on his earlier stuff

i met him at a signing once, he was a miserable git tbh


 
Posted : 04/04/2014 10:13 pm
Posts: 66111
Full Member
Topic starter
 

Anyone complaining about the sprawl of cryptonomicon has not read Reamde I think.

Revelation Space (etc) peeved me thoroughly, because when it's good, it's bloomin brilliant. It's just that when it's less good, it's less good for 100000 words at a time. It's like he read Consider Phlebas and thought "This'd be miles better if I replaced all the exciting scenes with 10 chapters in which nothing happens at all". The lighthugger chase, aaargh, takes up about a quarter of the book and all he really says is "They chase each other for a while, then one of the ships breaks"


 
Posted : 04/04/2014 10:16 pm
Posts: 2622
Full Member
 

I met him at a talk/signing too and he seemed OK, albeit the talk was pretty dull. I really liked Revelation Space but liked the subsequent books in the sequence a bit less. I did like The Prefect and I think that once I got into it I liked Pushing Ice too. Still have a few of his other books on my shelf to dip into at some point as well.


 
Posted : 04/04/2014 10:18 pm
 10
Posts: 1506
Full Member
 

Kind of got warn out with redemption ark. Haven't finished the series. Without spoilers, is it worth it? I like the story but there's so much to read through!


 
Posted : 04/04/2014 10:59 pm
Posts: 7365
Free Member
 

Not long since finished "The Scar". Awesome book, really enjoyed it.


 
Posted : 04/04/2014 11:46 pm
Posts: 6947
Full Member
 

The Scar was great - best SF book I've picked up for a long time. His imagination speaks for itself, but the craftsmanship of the novel was exceptional. Sustaining that story took a lot of skill IMHO.

Waiting for another Bas-Lag novel from him but I guess he lost his way a little with the Iron Council. Ingredients all there but sort of the opposite to The Scar, v flawed at the nuts and bolts level of story-telling.


 
Posted : 04/04/2014 11:56 pm