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Scrivener's Moon

par Philip Reeve

Séries: Mortal Engines Quartet (prequel 3), Fever Crumb (3)

MembresCritiquesPopularitéÉvaluation moyenneMentions
361871,218 (3.87)5
When she returns home after two years, Fever finds that her Scriven mother's creation, New London, the city on wheels, is nearly complete and ready to fight the nomad tribes of Britain--and Fever must journey to the north to find the ancient birthplace of the Scriven mutants and solve the mystery of her own past.… (plus d'informations)
  1. 10
    The Prince in Waiting Trilogy par John Christopher (themulhern)
    themulhern: A post-apocalyptic England with a more or less mediaeval culture. Hints of the past...but since these books were written so long ago, the past does not contain ipods. Simpler, less humourous and less violent than the Fever Crumb trilogy, but less ultimately hopeful for its protagonist.… (plus d'informations)
  2. 00
    Fever Crumb par Philip Reeve (ed.pendragon)
    ed.pendragon: Another prequel to the Mortal Engines Quartet
  3. 00
    Anathem par Neal Stephenson (themulhern)
    themulhern: A highly trained young scientist has to go out into the world and experience the world's superstition and arbitrariness and dangers.
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» Voir aussi les 5 mentions

Affichage de 1-5 de 8 (suivant | tout afficher)
My thoughts on the series in general are attached to my review for Book 1. The moving cities are built with balsa wood/paper framing above the engineering systems? Really? Not exactly the impression given in the Mortal Engines series. Why try to make them more believable? Who was annoyed about the realism of giant predatory cities roaming the world eating each other?

Honestly, that's my true take-away from this series closer. Couldn't find much motivation to care about the essential struggle portrayed. The edges of the story seemed more interesting (a vampire race that worships ancient pyramids full of tech? That's a book right there!) ( )
  sarcher | Mar 10, 2019 |
I didn't enjoy this one quite as much at the previous book, but it's still pretty good YA fiction...good story, good characters, an interesting plot, and an imaginative setting. ( )
  DLMorrese | Oct 14, 2016 |
Grim and exciting, and a lot more like the first book than the second. Loses half a star for preferring mayhem to believable plot at some crucial points. Charlie Shallow is all too real, and he's on his way up. The epilogue is too facile. Its very presence makes me fear that Reeve has finished with Fever Crumb for good. He may be all written out, but I can't say I'm all read out.

Philip Reeve is probably a bit critical about the current version of London. Fever Crumb's London is grim, in a Dickensian way, but it also has a Dickensian appeal. She lives in the aftermath of a great war, which set technology back and depopulated the world, but it is possible that a depopulated, technologically poor world has some aesthetic advantages over the populated, technologically crass and self-destructive one that we live in today.

Reread in 2020, and noticed the wierd echos of "The Dragonrider's of Pern"; the rediscovery of old tech. But here, it just goes up in flames, after very little speech. ( )
  themulhern | Mar 15, 2015 |
Really thought this was the third book in a trilogy. That's what I get for not doing my homework. Loved it, and *don't* want to wait who knows how long for the finale.

Side note... it's cool to be able to put this on my lgbtq shelf, too. ( )
  amaraduende | Mar 29, 2013 |
not standalone. recommend to readers of _Fever Crumb_. ( )
  DeweyEver | Mar 6, 2013 |
Affichage de 1-5 de 8 (suivant | tout afficher)
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When she returns home after two years, Fever finds that her Scriven mother's creation, New London, the city on wheels, is nearly complete and ready to fight the nomad tribes of Britain--and Fever must journey to the north to find the ancient birthplace of the Scriven mutants and solve the mystery of her own past.

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