The Wonder Engine

, #2

paperback, 364 pages

Published July 2, 2018 by Argyll Productions.

ISBN:
978-1-61450-442-9
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(30 reviews)

Pull three people out of prison--a disgraced paladin, a convicted forger, and a heartless assassin. Give them weapons, carnivorous tattoos, and each other. Point them at the enemy.

What could possibly go wrong?

3 editions

reviewed The Wonder Engine by T. Kingfisher (Clocktaur War, #2)

-

As I mentioned in my review of The Clockwork Boys, these two books were so closely tied together (and comparatively short for the genre) that I wondered why this story was split into two books at all. But it was, so here we are.

So the first half of our party's suicide mission - navigating through an active warzone between two dangerous armies - was completely sidestepped at the end of the first book through magic shenanigans. Okay, so we get to the rival city they're meant to infiltrate and we begin phase two of the suicide mission, but the stakes still feel oddly low? And I'm only just realizing now in my attempt to explain this book that the only obvious character that can act as an antagonist... doesn't have anything to do with the central ~suicide mission~ and mostly just has a personal vendetta solely against one of …

reviewed The Wonder Engine by T. Kingfisher (Clocktaur War, #2)

Charming Story

I liked the Clocktaur Wars well enough. It is a charming story around a ragtag group of misfits, who are all equally lovable and grow personally during their adventure. So far, so predictable. Don't expect too many surprises, it's a nice enough storytelling interwoven with an (equally predictable) romance story. Some light, fun reading, although it gets at least a little bit dark in the end.

Review of 'The Wonder Engine' on 'Storygraph'

THE WONDER ENGINE is a perfect sequel to THE CLOCKWORK BOYS, full of wit and care between a small group of people expecting to spend the rest of their extremely brief lives in one another's company against long odds and in great danger.

Grimehug plays more more central role here, but specifically not as one of the heroes. He's accompanying the humans so that some gnole is keeping track of them, much as other gnoles accompany the clocktaurs. Learned Edmund's change of character is gradual enough to feel reasonable, but is a complete transformation from his first appearance in THE CLOCKWORK BOYS. I love Slate and Caliban, and I like finding out a bit more of Slate's former life in Anuket City. Brenner continues to be a lurky assassin and an excellent character.

This does a tremendous amount of worldbuilding related to gnoles as their society intersects with humans in …

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