The Diamond Device

Paperback, 268 pages

Published Nov. 1, 2020 by Caroline Thaung.

ISBN:
978-1-912819-14-0
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ASIN:
B08M9CNK6L

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5 stars (1 review)

After diamond power promises to replace steam, an unemployed labourer and a thieving noble unite to foil an international plot and avert a war.

Alf Wilson resents the new technology that cost him his factory job, especially as his clockwork leg bars him from army enrolment. He daren’t confess his unemployment to his overbearing mother. Desperate over the rent, he ends up in a detention cell with a hangover.

Impoverished Lord Richard Hayes maintains his expensive parliamentary seat by a mixture of charm and burglary. During a poorly planned break-in, he inadvertently witnesses a kidnapping. To cap it all, the police arrest him for the crime. At least he's using a fake identity. The real criminals make off with not just the professor who discovered diamond power, but her plans for a diamond-fuelled bomb.

When Rich encounters Alf in the neighbouring cell, he sees an opportunity to keep his noble …

1 edition

Brilliant Cut

5 stars

I blazed through this book in a couple of days. I loved that it explored a steampunky world being changed by a new source of energy, upsetting a precariously balanced applecart. The socio-economic underpinning gave steampunk a fresh take in a Second World setting.

The main characters - Alf and Rich - played well with and against each other, backed up by a solid cohort of supporters, opponents, and various others. The world of grit and steam, of science and wish, of rich and poor felt like one I could step into and - if not find my way - at least know who to ask. The story itself twisted and turned just enough to keep me engaged and not so much that it felt gratuitous.

Too often steampunk gets treated like a genre instead of an aesthetic. In The Diamond Device, M. H. Thaung uses the steampunk aesthetic - …