Welcome to the bizarre and dangerous world of Victorian London, a city
teetering on the edge of revolution. Its people are ushering in a new
era of technology, dazzled each day by new inventions. Airships soar in
the skies over the city, whilst ground trains rumble through the
streets and clockwork automatons are programmed to carry out menial
tasks in the offices of lawyers, policemen and journalists. But beneath
this shiny veneer of progress lurks a sinister side. For this is also a
world where lycanthropy is a rampant disease that plagues the dirty
whorehouses of Whitechapel, where poltergeist infestations create havoc
in old country seats, where cadavers can rise from the dead and where
nobody ever goes near the Natural History Museum. The Immorality Engine
is the third in the Newbury and Hobbes series.
About The Author
George Mann is the author of The Affinity Bridge, Ghosts of Manhattan
and The Human Abstract, as well as numerous short stories, novellas and
an original Doctor Who audiobook. He has edited a number of anthologies
including The Solaris Book of New Science Fiction, The Solaris Book of
New Fantasy and a retrospective collection of Sexton Blake stories,
Sexton Blake, Detective. He lives near Grantham with his wife, son and
daughter.
Industry Reviews
Praise for The Affinity Bridge: "Mann's imagination has clearly run wild in this quirky and well realised version of the world, and this is no bad thing!It's fun, it's exciting, and Mann has a very agreeable hand that's easy to appreciate!He has a sharp talent for writing and a surplus of enthusiasm for the genre..." SCIFI Now "The author does a superb job of recreating nineteenth century London...a thoroughly engaging story!Excellent world building; captures the Sherlock Holmes feel; never a boring passage. Bottom line: A hugely entertaining book. 4.5 out of 5." SF Signal. "I absolutely loved it" Lou Anders "Fans of Alan Moore's work will likely enjoy Mann's depiction of Victorian asylums, slums, aristocratic soirees and things that go bump in the night." Strange Horizons "Automata, clattering railway carriages, hansom cabs and 'pea soupers', gas lit streets and the doffing of caps, gruff policemen, mad scientists, arrogant industrialists, seances, pentagrams, addictions to laudanum and a few ravening zombies...Mann is at the forefront of the new generation of UK genre movers and shakers." SFRevu.com 'Mann is at the forefront of the new generation of UK genre movers and shakers.' SFRevu.com 'The author does a superb job of recreating nineteenth century London...a thoroughly engaging story.' SF Signal 'Mann is leading the charge.' The Guardian 'Fans of Alan Moore's work will likely enjoy Mann's depiction of Victorian asylums, slums, aristocratic soirees and things that go bump in the night.' Strange Horizons 'A carefully plotted and entertaining steampunk mystery.' SciFi.com '[Mann] has a sharp talent for writing and a surplus of enthusiasm for the genre' Sci Fi Now 'Highly, highly recommended' fantasybookcritic.com