Rabu, 24 Juli 2019

PDF Download , by Emma Newman

PDF Download , by Emma Newman

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, by Emma Newman

, by Emma Newman


, by Emma Newman


PDF Download , by Emma Newman

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, by Emma Newman

Product details

File Size: 1151 KB

Print Length: 178 pages

Publisher: Tor.com (October 17, 2017)

Publication Date: October 17, 2017

Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC

Language: English

ASIN: B072BFKH1P

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#611,456 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

The second book of Emma Newman's Industrial Magic series, tells us more about Charlotte Gunn and Magus Hopkins. Newman once again blends Mystery with Urban Fantasy and a touch of Romance as Charlotte goes undercover to help solve the problems in the mill. Like the first book, Brother's Ruin, this book is a short, easy read. I started and finished in one afternoon, but it was a fun, enjoyable read.

Whilst there are passages that makes me want to scream at the screen, in the vein of pre-Scream horror, visiting the Industrial Magic England is entertaining and captivating.As suits book two, we learn more of the characters, the Royal Society and how magic might work. All in all a quick summer read, and looking forward to further adventure

You are quickly transported into the time setting. The world may seem easy to build as Austen and Dickens have done much of the work, but the author makes a real contribution to the genre, making magic substantial but imperfect.Looking forward to the continued growth of the character in later adventures.

Good read... little to short but enjoyed the book. Read book out of order so little confused.. going to find 1st book

haven't had time to read it-looks interesting.

Weaver’s Lament is the second installment in a series of novellas set in a fantastical alternate history, where magic meets Victorian England. If your not familiar with the series, the first book is Brother’s Ruin. I would suggest reading the series in order.When Charlotte receives a letter from her brother Ben begging her to come visit, she assumes that something other than homesickness is at play. And she’s right; her brother is overseeing a factory where the machines keep being disrupted. The magus in charge believes the cause to be secret socialists among the workers, and if Ben doesn’t find the culprits, the magus threatens to deport him to Australia. So Ben asks Charlotte to go undercover as a worker in the mill and find the solution.I like how Weaver’s Lament investigated another aspect of the Victorian era and talked about the extreme class differences and exploration of the poor by factory owners. I’m not sure I’ve read any other historical fantasy book that does quite the same. I guess laboring for sixteen hours a day in a factory doesn’t give many opportunities for magical adventures.I’m liking Charlotte more and more (even if I’m liking her brother less and less). She’s very much a middle class Victorian woman, and prior to Weaver’s Lament, she’d bought into the assertions that the factories were ethical and treated the workers well. She hasn’t had much exposure to this sort of injustice (although she’s internalized a lot of the era’s sexism), and having her eyes opened leads her towards a passionate desire for social and systematic change.Charlotte is convinced that she wants the life a woman of her station is supposed to have: she’s going to marry George and be a respectable, middle class woman. Yet at the same time, she’s secretly diverging from those norms by having a career as an illustrator (which she hasn’t told George about). I think as the series goes on, she’ll start to question things more and more. Especially because her growing crush on a certain handsome magus might throw a wrench in her wedding plans…Weaver’s Lament also has a lot of juicy new revelations about magic and the society of mages. I don’t want to say too much more, but Emma Newman never disappoints, and I think I enjoyed Weaver’s Lament even more than the first installment.I received an ARC in exchange for a free and honest review.

Weaver’s Lament is the second novella in Emma Newman’s Industrial Magic series, and it’s a stronger story than the first.In the previous novella, Charlotte Gunn helped her brother Benjamin achieve a position in the Royal Society of mages while hiding her own considerable powers from their notice. Now Ben asks her to come see him even though family visits are forbidden by the Society. When Charlotte arrives, Ben begs her to help him learn whether labor unionists are responsible for sabotaging the looms in the mill where he uses his magic to support production. He’s afraid that if he can’t figure out what’s happening, his mentor (a villainous mage whose evil activities where revealed in the first story) will blame him, and he’ll be punished with transportation to Australia. So, Charlotte goes undercover as a mill worker to try to figure out what’s going on, with some assistance from Magus Hopkins, a member of the Society who is secretly helping Charlotte learn to control her magic.One of the strengths of this series is how Newman marries the use of magic with an exploration of the actual social issues of Victorian Britain. Her description of the lives of mill workers in 1850 illuminates the reality of their miserable existence, although Newman adds a magical component that makes their mistreatment even worse. Ben’s belief that they should be grateful to have a job at all perfectly typifies the response of much of the Victorian middle and upper class to their suffering. The story really makes it perfectly clear why the rise of organized labor was necessary.The position of women in the period is illustrated by Ben’s attitude toward Charlotte as well. He takes her support for granted and dismisses any concerns she might have about the treatment of the mill workers or the activities of his mentor or the Royal Society. Charlotte loves him too much to really challenge this treatment, but he clearly sees her as lesser. (I can’t help but hope he gets his comeuppance for that belief in the future.)In this novella, readers also learn why Hopkins is defying the Society to secretly train Charlotte. Suffice it to say that the rot in the Royal Society goes deeper than Ben’s mentor, and the consequences for challenging them may be very high indeed.The weakest element of the story is Charlotte’s romantic feelings for Hopkins. She goes giddy about him a bit too often, especially since she’s supposed to be in love and engaged to be married. Really, Charlotte needs to cut her fiancée George loose rather than string the poor sap along at this point.If you liked Newman’s first novella or enjoy alternate world historical fantasy, you should give this book a try. I’m very much looking forward to reading the next in the series.An eARC of this novella was provided by the publisher through NetGalley for review; all opinions expressed are my own.

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