princess: (cherry tart)
(salt, sweat,) sugar on the asphalt ([personal profile] princess) wrote in [community profile] steampunk2009-04-24 09:03 am
Entry tags:

Friday Question!

Alright, this week's Friday Question is a little selfish, but I've watched all my DVDs so...

What's your favorite Steampunk media work? It can be a book, a CD, a DVD or something else! Tell us a little bit about it! Maybe you'll make a connection with someone else who loves your obscure theremin recordings...or maybe you'll find something you never heard of and want to check out!

(As always, answers in the comments please!)
ext_86153: (Default)

[identity profile] miracled.livejournal.com 2009-04-24 07:37 pm (UTC)(link)
I loved the twist ending on that movie. Boy they had it out for each other.
ext_86153: (Default)

[identity profile] miracled.livejournal.com 2009-04-24 07:41 pm (UTC)(link)
I'd have to say Whitechapel Gods by S.M.Peters. It's incredibly descriptive in such a gritty way. It's great to follow so many people from so many perspectives, and a lot of the main characters grabbed me as soon as I saw them to be used later.

The back cover is as follows for anyone interested:

In Victorian London, the Whitechapel section has been cut off, enclosed by an impassable wall, and is now ruled by two mysterious mechanical gods. Mama Engine is the goddess of sentiment, a mother to her believers. Grandfather Clock represents logic and precision.

A few years have passed since the Uprising, when humans fought the gold cloaks, the black cloaks, and even the vicious Boiler Men, the brutal police force responsible for keeping humans in check. Today, Whitechapel is a mechanized, steam-driven hell. But a few brave veterans of the Uprising have formed a new resistance, and they are gathering for another attack. For now they have a secret weapon that may finally free them...or kill them.

[personal profile] frogmonster 2009-04-24 08:34 pm (UTC)(link)
"Professor Layton and the Curious Village" on the NDS. I adored the story, the music and the atmosphere. The puzzles are also very entertaining of course but I played it twice already just for the Sherlock Holmes meets Cogwheels feel.
howlet: (Default)

[personal profile] howlet 2009-04-29 06:25 am (UTC)(link)
My favorite would have to be Airborn by Kenneth Oppel. (It also has two excellent sequels: Skybreaker and Starclimber.) The story unfolds 800 feet in the air on one of the luxury airships that dominate the skies in the Victorian-age setting. The airship Aurora is kind of the Titanic of the skies but the story is very much angled at a Treasure Island-like adventure. In addition, the traditional steampunk inventions (particularly the flying variety), air pirates, strange creatures, a strong plot, and an excellent hero and heroine team create quite a story. And that's only in the first novel...!

(Why, yes, it does have a website!)

(*Edit: Go, link, go!)
Edited 2009-04-29 06:26 (UTC)
bliumchik: (Default)

[personal profile] bliumchik 2009-05-02 02:04 pm (UTC)(link)
Late to the boat, but I have to say Warren Elli's FreakAngels is pretty fucking awesome.
dokkaebi: art by Amy Sol and Casey Weldon (Default)

[personal profile] dokkaebi 2009-05-20 05:46 am (UTC)(link)
Ellis's Aetheric Mechanics: A Graphic Novella is also pretty ace. :D