"All good books are alike in that they are truer than if they had really happened
and after you are finished reading one you will feel that all that happened to you
and afterwards it all belongs to you; the good and the bad, the ecstasy, the remorse,
and sorrow, the people and the places and how the weather was."
Ernest Hemingway

Friday, April 7, 2017

Kiss of Steel

Title details for Kiss of Steel by Bec McMaster - Available
Sourcebooks Casablanca
Kiss of Steel
Bec McMaster
2012

The Summary
"When nowhere is safe….

"Most people avoid the dreaded Whitechapel district.  For Honoria Todd, it’s the last safe haven.  But at what price?

"Blade is known as the master of the rookeries--no one dares cross him.  It’s been said he faced down the Echelon’s army single-handedly, that ever since being infected by the blood-craving he’s been quicker, stronger, almost immortal.

"When Honoria shows up at his door, his tenuous control comes close to snapping.  She’s so…innocent.  He doesn’t see her backbone of steel--or that she could be the very salvation he’s been seeking."

The Good
I was intrigued by this novel and, starting out, I fell in love with the unusual, complex world of verwulfen, blue bloods, vampires, and mechanical creatures.  There’s an unexpected depth to this story.  You have the blue bloods--not quite vampires, not quite human--who basically run society from their Ivory Tower, trailed by human consorts and blood thralls; and then you have verwulfen (werewolves), humans, and others who live outside the blue blood’s pristine city, living on the very fringes of "respectable" society.

Except it's not that clear cut.

Blade rules the rookeries of Whitechapel, and even the Dukes of the Ivory Tower are hesitant to cross him.  Honoria is one of the many humans caught in between, but she's also the daughter of an Institute scientist and a chemist in her own right.  Humans, blue bloods, verwulfen, and more living together in one city, but it’s a tenuous relationship at best.  A variety of variables come into play:  blood taxes, drainers, humanity first insurgents, house rivalries, Slasher gangs and turf wars, and Queen Alexandra, thrall of the Prince Consort.  It all hinges on how far one wants to push the boundaries, because anything could tip the balance and bring London--and Britain--crashing to its knees.

I found all the detail fascinating and, honestly, I wish I could have had more.  Like I was curious to hear about France, which endured a different Reign of Terror in which the blue blood aristocracy was put the guillotine; Spain suffered another Inquisition, in which blue bloods were hunted rather than witches or religious dissidents; Germany didn’t have so much a blue blood ruling class as a massive verwulfen population; China saw the initial outbreak of the craving disease, the first symptoms of vampirism; and America is still a colony to the British Empire.

It's a curious reworking of historical events that I found fascinating.  And that's not even including a close look at the precarious situation of the Fade and the course of the craving disease.  Blue bloods are vampires, as we traditionally view them; however, it's different in Kiss of Steel.  Blue bloods are in control of their hunger (for the most part), but as they age they come closer and closer to the Fade, in which they slowly lose all human aspects and slip closer to an unstoppable, insatiable hunger for blood.  They essentially begin to rot, losing all traces of the person they were previously and they become monsters--they become vampires.

I found it a fascinating concept.

Overall, I enjoyed reading Kiss of Steel.  It's a blending of science fiction, paranormal, steampunk, horror, and fantasy, and it develops an intriguing story--an intriguing world--that kept me captivated.  Once I was hooked, I found there was no going back.  I had to find out what happened with Honoria and Blade--would she be captured by Vickers, Duke of Lannister, and killed?  Would she find a cure that her father had so desperately sought?  Would Blade, who lurked on the fringes of the Fade, finally succumb?

I had to have an answer and, more or less, I was satisfied with the conclusion.  Granted, it's only the first of a series--book one of five (Heart of Iron, follows next, and then My Lady Quicksilver, Forged by Desire, and Of Silk and Steam)--so I have quite a bit more to read if I want to shore up the story and delve a little deeper into this steam-powered world of dangerous creatures.

The Bad
Okay, let me start off by saying, I really enjoyed this book.  The world building was absolutely fantastic, and I loved the political and social complexity that quivered just beneath the immediate surface--beneath Blade and Honoria’s story.

However--and saying this pains me a little--it could have been better.  Like so much better.

I love a little romance mixed in with my adventure stories, but I like to have more of a balance.  That is, I don't like romantic entanglements to overshadow the rest of the novel.  I've slowly become a romance novel fiend over the last year (if that's not already apparent), but I do like my stories to have a little more to them than sultry, steamy moments and gratuitous amounts of sex.

Like with Blade and Honoria.

Sure, yeah, I understand that it's bound to happen considering how desperately they crave each other.  Their relationship is practically incendiary.  However--you're probably going to get tired of me saying this--I would have liked to learn a little more about Honoria's father, her time among the blue bloods, and their shared experiments.  Honoria is a smart girl; in fact, she's frighteningly smart in some respects--and I would have loved seeing her flaunt that intelligence a little more.  I would have enjoyed seeing her continue her father's research, seeing her find, if not a cure, a way to stop the progression of the craving disease.

Don't get me wrong, she's a pretty great character.  She's smart, she's determined, she's handy with a pistol, plus--and this is a big one--she's not some shrinking violet, damsel-in-distress type when faced with danger.  I mean, before the end of the story, she'll face down a vampire not once, not twice, not even three--but four times.  She may not be as swift and skilled as Blade, and she may not be as strong as his verwulfen companion, Will, but that's not to say she’s not powerful in her own right.

I just had this little, lingering wish that she could have done more.  I know that sounds funny, considering she does quite a lot in regards to protecting her brother and sister, and she even saves Blade’s life on a couple of occasions.  I just wish she could have been featured more prominently in the search for a cure or, at least, a treatment; I wish I could have learned more about it and a little more about her.

Maybe, just maybe, the next book will expound upon her discoveries--or potential discoveries.

The Ugly
People get torn apart.

Literally.

No comments:

Post a Comment