The Fabric Formwork Book: Methods for Building New Architectural and Structural Forms in Concrete
Book
Concrete is the most used man-made material in the world and is the fundamental physical medium for...
Inter-Art Journey: Exploring the Common Grounds of the Arts Studies in Honor of Eli Rozik
Book
In recent years, inter-medial studies have attracted increasing attention in arts theory. The notion...
Natural Magic: Salted Paper Prints in North America
Jordan Bear, Russell Lord, Lisa Volpe and Keith F. Davis
Book
The salted paper print process and the daguerreotype were invented, for all practical purposes,...
The Paper Time Machine: Colouring the Past
Wolfgang Wild and Jordan Lloyd
Book
The Paper Time Machine is a book that will change the way you think about the past. It contains 130...
Socialize Your Patient Engagement Strategy: How Social Media and Mobile Apps Can Boost Health Outcomes
John Mack and Letizia Affinito
Book
Socialize Your Patient Engagement Strategy makes the case for a fundamentally new approach to...
Network Security with NetFlow and IPFIX: Big Data Analytics for Information Security
Book
A comprehensive guide for deploying, configuring, and troubleshooting NetFlow and learning big data...
The Comics of Charles Schulz: The Good Grief of Modern Life
Book
The Comics of Charles Schulz collects new essays on the work of the creator of the immensely popular...
The League of Regrettable Superheroes: Half-Baked Heroes from Comic Book History
Book
A fun, funny, and affectionate look at the strangest superheroes to ever appear in comics, some so...
ClareR (5726 KP) rated The Shape of Darkness in Books
Feb 21, 2021
Agnes is a silhouette artist in Victorian Bath, and she struggles to support her sickly mother and her nephew - although his father does contribute some money to help feed and clothe him (and help Agnes and her mother too).
Shortly after one of Agnes’ clients leaves her studio, he is murdered. She then discovers that another client has also been murdered - there is an unnerving pattern forming here, because this is just the start. In order to get some insight, Agnes decides that she should consult a medium. This is where Pearl and her sister Myrtle, a mesmerist-in-training, come in. Pearl is ethereal, a child with albinism, and seems to genuinely possess the gift of communicating with the dead.
This is an unnerving, chilling and at times, quite a scary book. It’s full of the detail of Victorian life too: poverty, class distinctions, the hustle and bustle of a busy Victorian Bath. I loved the dark, gothic feel, too. It contained loads of details of life, of how technology was changing and affecting the lives of Victorians. And it was just a really excellent mystery that kept me guessing to the very end. If you’re going to read it (and I strongly suggest that you do!), just don’t read it with only the little light on if you’re spooked easily!
Many thanks to Raven Books for providing me with an e-book through NetGalley to read and review.
ClareR (5726 KP) rated Luckenbooth in Books
Feb 14, 2021
Luckenbooth piqued my interest as soon as I saw the cover photo - and then I read the synopsis. How could it possibly NOT appeal to me? I mean, the devils daughter rows to Edinburgh in a coffin to work for the Minister of Culture. I was hooked. It’s not all about her though. The book is split into three sections, each section revolving around three different characters, and we see glimpses in to their lives. There are people from all walks of life: strippers, spies, maids, a black human rights lawyer with a bone mermaid, drug addicts, poets, a medium. These are all people who live on the edge of society (within No. 10 Luckenbooth Close, anyway!), people who have little - and they live in a tenement that has been cursed by the devils daughter.
The stories seem not to be linked to one another, and their only link is the fact that they all live in the same tenement building. I really enjoyed these snapshots, any one of them could have been longer and I would have enjoyed them just as much. This fed my love of short stories though, and I really liked how reality was mixed with the more supernatural elements.
I will have to dig out my copies of Fagans books The Sunlight Pilgrims and The Panopticon, languishing in my Kindle library - this has really made me want to read her other books.
Many thanks to the publisher for providing me with a copy of this book through NetGalley.