New York Times Sunday Book Review, June 3, 2011:
Valentine’s novel has the stylized quality of books by Angela Carter like “The Infernal Desire Machines of Doctor Hoffman,” and it displays similar pyrotechnics. Run by a woman known as Boss, the traveling Circus Tresaulti ekes out its existence against a postapocalyptic backdrop of cities rebuilding after “the bombs and the radiation.” The setting is unimaginative, but the circus performers, most of them mechanically altered to enhance their acts, come to life in a series of skillful set pieces. Chief among these performers are the aerialists Alec, who has recently (and intentionally) fallen to his death, and Bird, who has replaced him. Together they give the novel its emotional force, as Valentine keeps returning to the reasons for Alec’s death: “For anyone who sees it, a moment like that is never in the past; it is always happening. . . . When Bird falls, Alec is falling.” In contrast to the complexity of that haunting echo, the plot is more basic, involving the threat from a dastardly “government man.” Yet in a highwire act of her own, Valentine still raises the novel above the ordinary through her ability to convey the richness of the circus performers’ emotional lives, coupled with impressive writing — as in a description of Alec’s surgically attached wings, every bone-and-brass feather “jigsawed and hammered and smoothed so thin that when it strikes another feather it rings out a clear note.”
New York Times Reviews MECHANIQUE by Genevieve ValentineSean Wallace | Jun 03, 2011 in NewsLaptopmag.com Features MECHANIQUESean Wallace | Jun 02, 2011 in NewsIn a review of the Barnes & Noble Touch, Laptop: The Pulse of Mobile Tech selected a really great book to use as a screen comparison example…Mechanique: A Tale of the Circus Tresaulti by Genevieve Valentine! The review compares the Nook and the Kindle side by side and then uses this illustration… …then goes on to mention graphics”such as book covers and magazine art, look as good in grayscale as we’d expect…” There it is: Mechanique‘s cover by Kiri Moth in glorious black-and-white. We’d love to claim our clever product placement and brilliant marketing strategy put the book there, but we really don’t know how it got there except that the reviewer must have excellent taste in books! Final Covers: WHEN THE GREAT DAYS COME, Gardner DozoisSean Wallace | May 31, 2011 in NewsFangtastic Reviews: VAMPIRES: THE RECENT UNDEADSean Wallace | May 23, 2011 in NewsFangtastic Books: Looking for Vampires? Read This…
New Cover for MAYAN DECEMBER by Brenda CooperSean Wallace | May 21, 2011 in NewsHere’s the new cover for MAYAN DECEMBER by BRENDA COOPER. Click on the image to see a larger version or on the title for more on the book.
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