The Strange Affair of Spring Heeled Jack (Burton & Swinburne, #1)

The Strange Affair of Spring Heeled Jack (Burton & Swinburne #1)

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3.7 of 5 stars 3.70  ·  rating details  ·  2,473 ratings  ·  450 reviews
London, 1861.

Sir Richard Francis Burton—explorer, linguist, scholar, and swordsman; his reputation tarnished; his career in tatters; his former partner missing and probably dead.

Algernon Charles Swinburne—unsuccessful poet and follower of de Sade; for whom pain is pleasure, and brandy is ruin!

They stand at a crossroads in their lives and are caught in the epicenter of an e...more
Paperback, 511 pages
Published April 30th 2010 by Snowbooks (first published 2010)
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Community Reviews

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Stephen
This super debut novel is like a sweet, dainty cup of mild English tea...if it was spiked with Absinthe, poured into a heavy brass goblet and served with Laudanum-laced cookies shaped like medical experiments gone awry. In other words, a great blend of prim, proper and the freakishly bizarre...somebody pass the hookah, this one’s gonna get weird.

Set in 1861 in an Victorian Albertian England, Mark Hodder has created one of the most enticingly strange and intriguing steampunk worlds I have come a...more
Kelly Leigh
Jun 28, 2011 Kelly Leigh rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: history buffs who love them some fantasy and everyone else
Mad props to author Mark Hodder for the amount of research and time that went into writing this novel. It had to be a veritable migraine tidying it all together into book form. And I hand out an A+ for originality.

The Strange Affair of Spring Heeled Jack is a madcap, whimsical tale of epic proportions centering around actual historical figures who lived during the Victorian period. Specifically the explorer/anthropologist Sir Richard Francis Burton and his very own Watson - the unabashed Marqui...more
mark monday
EH? EH! this desperate steampunk non-adventure plays like an overly hysterical farce with delusions of grandeur. although seemingly full of creative ideas, those ideas have run sadly amuck. there is no grounding of the frivolity in interesting characterization or sparkling dialogue - both of which remain almost obstinately insipid and amateurish; famous english personages are tossed around willy-nilly with little sense and zero resonance; cutesie-poo preciousness is found everywhere, from the li...more
Eric
Sep 01, 2011 Eric rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Steam-punk fans
I'm so glad I stumbled onto this imaginative steam-punk series. I loved the protagonist, a fictionalized Sir Richard Francis Burton, his side-kick, an equally fictionalized Algernon Charles Swinburne, and their adventures in this alternate Victorian England, complete with genetically modified animals, steam engine-propelled penny farthings and flying rotochairs (view spoiler)[and, of course, time-travel (hide spoiler)].

I loved the inclusion of so many personalities of the time, such as Charles D...more
Reg
I'm not a huge fan of steampunk but any book that has Sir Richard Francis Burton as a protagonist automatically predsposes me towards liking it. In this case the fact that the book is well written and researched historically and features a plethora of other famous Victorians of whom I am quite fond only furter ehances the appeal. A very promising debut novel and one of the rare instances where I am fervently hoping for a sequel. Well done.
Ala
A steampunky alt-history story involving famous historical figures doing things they never would've done in a world gone mad with genetic trickery and technological advancements far beyond what they should've had.

It was a slow start, got interesting with the introduction of the title character, then meandered a bit towards the end.

All in all, a decent read.


Two and a half jacks.
Chance Maree
I enjoyed reading this time travel/ alternative history novel, and probably would have relished it to a greater extent were I more familiar with English historical events and figures. Even so, I recognized most of the main characters and parts of London I've seen, so the setting and actors came alive. The fantastical elements were great fun, full of imagination and humor, like a bit of old fashioned Sherlock Holmes mixed with the craziness of Austin Powers - the writing was very visual.

The stor...more
Paul
Actual rating: 2.5 stars.

I read The Strange Affair of Spring Heeled Jack on the recommendation of a friend who is into steampunk and "bizarro world" novels. So far I've taken a pass on the bizarro world genre, but I do read some steampunk. My preference in steampunk novels is with those that teach us about human nature and the alternate timeline that branched off to become our own; I'm thinking particularly about China Miéville and his Perdido Street Station, or Dexter Palmer's The Dream of Perp...more
Shanshad Whelan
I picked this up after a run of perfectly uninspiring urban fantasies. I wasn't entirely sure what to expect, but was delighted with what I found. An alernate Victorian history steampunk novel full of familiar characters in unfamiliar roles. An engaging and fascinating romp through an England I've never even thought to imagine, but fully enjoyed seeing crafted on the pages I read.

Rather than a plucky young heroine or hero engaged in a wild steampunk ride, our protagonist is none other than Sir...more
Jürgen Zeller
Spring Heeled Jack ist eine der urbanen Legenden und zugleich Rätsel der viktorianischen Zeit in England. Er war eine Schreckgestalt, ein Märchengespenst mit dem Mütter ihren unartigen Kinder drohten "Benimm dich! Oder Spring Heeled Jack kommt dich holen!" Die Kreatur fiel während eines Zeitraumes zwischen 1837 und 1888 unverhofft über arglose Bürger her. Auf Deutsch übersetzt bedeutet sein Name etwa "Sprungfeder-Jack". Sein bizarres Aussehen und seine Fähigkeit riesige Sprünge zu vollführen ers...more
Scurra
Time-travel - at least in the paradox-inducing non-linear form - is challenging to do well. You have to decide how you are going to handle the consequences of introducing a time-traveller at all, especially into recorded history, and you need to ensure that the incidents that occur "out of sequence" don't feel arbitrarily forced into the narrative, and you need to

In this entertaining alternate history novel (I guess you could call it Steampunk given the heavy Victoriana clockwork technology inv...more
Campbell Mcaulay
Victorian London is stalked by a mad-eyed leaping sex-pest/assassin and a gang of vicious "loup-garous" intent on abducting the capital's chimney sweeps. Who better to divine their nefarious intentions and solve these apparently unconnected mysteries than the unconventional explorer and adventurer, Sir Richard Francis Burton and his trusty sidekick, poet and libertine Algernon Swinburne.

Take a covey of well-known Victorian (well, sort of Victorian) personalities, drop them into an alternate hist...more
Loki
If you’re a fan of Dr Who or Steam Punkery, this book is definitely something you’d be interested in. It doesn’t take long to realize that this is NOT the Victorian England you read about in History class. With genetically engineered dogs who deliver the mail, mechanized velocipedes, giant swans that provide air transportation, Hodder’s vision of Victorian England is a menagerie. When you add in that society is torn into factions of steam punk engineers, mad scientists and revolutionaries, you g...more
Pandem
I picked this up at Powell's in Portland in February. Huge bookstore; you'll need the maps they give out at the front desk. Go there if you get the chance, though the graphic novel selection was a little skimpy.

Anyway.

I love this book. I love this book not because of its perfect pacing, its bizarre-yet-intriguing characters, its many nods to history, or that I appear to be stuck in a Victorian steampunk/sci-fi rut(I read this series and the first two books of Gail Carriger's "Parasol Protectorat...more
Timothy Lewis
If you have not given this book, the first of three in a series, a look yet then shame on you. Mark Hodder brings the fictional out of non-fictional characters without going to far out of the realms of possibility in The Strange Affair of Spring Heeled Jack. The author gives us a novel that falls into the What If? sub-genre of books that give Steampunk novels their bite. Here we have two real people, Sir Richard Burton and Algernon Charles Swinburne, made into larger then life characters that ar...more
Bek
Very strange, steampunk alternate history twisted-time adventure mystery set in the Victorian era. I really did not know what to make of this pretty much the entire time I was reading it. I'm still not sure how I feel about it, but I believe I'm leaning towards positive. It's kind of like a throwaway pulp fiction adventure from yesteryear. The storytelling style is quite unique. The fake quotes and adverts at chapter beginnings I quite liked, they helped to add flavour and depth to the bizarre w...more
NibbledToDeathByCats
Two stars means it was okay, and three stars means I liked it, so call it a 2½ or a 2¾. I wanted to like this book, and it was filled with great ideas, and really did have its moments, but the things that dragged it down for me were lackluster prose that felt incongruous with the Victorian setting, the predictability of the plot, the villain's stupidity (SHJ), a catalog of names and dates to keep track of without sufficient supporting context (should have made a cheat sheet!), and elements of fa...more
Lightreads
Feh. I haven't run across a time-traveler this toe-curlingly incompetent since the last time I read Connie Willis.

Promising start, irritating and disappointing everything else. I like steampunk, I like alternate history, I like historicals featuring famous people. This had all of the above going for it . . . and proceeded to make them all deeply obnoxious. This doesn't just feature Sir Richard Burton (the explorer, Jim, not the actor), it scrapes up every godforsaken contemporary of his and shoe...more
Michael Davis
Good stuff, even though I read the second one first, then this first one second. I've been totally drunk on Steampunk of late, and don't see myself sobering up any time soon.

Can't put my finger on it, but Hodder's Steampunkian visions are slightly different than other authors of that genre, in the same way that Cherie Priest is a little different from Devon Monk who's a little different from George Mann - each of whom I'll gladly read whenver they have anything new out. I think it's a case of gr...more
Alyssa
I usually quite like steampunk, so I was pretty excited to start reading this book but in the end, it somehow fell short for me. I suppose the main thing that bothered me about it was that EVERYONE seemed to be a historical figure, and not all of them really made a whole lot of sense in the alternate reality of the story (not that I actually know a whole lot about the history). I guess it just felt a bit gimmicky to me :( The other big thing I had a hard time with was... (view spoiler)[ why is t...more
Jimm Wetherbee
Spring Heeled Jack was a real character of the 19th century, or at least as real as alien abductors are. Jack first made his appearance in the mid 1830's and while reports were concentrated then and in the 1860's, sightings continued into the early 1920's. Jack was described as having red eyes, a large helmeted head, a bat-wing like cape, stilt-like heels, and prodigious jumping ability. Some reports had him jump twenty feet in the air. Jack was also notorious for molesting very young women. Wit...more
Charles Dee Mitchell
Hodder needed a different, meaner editor for his first novel. Anywhere from 20% - 25% could go. Every incident goes on a little too long. The second half of every compound sentence could be dropped. Conversations are over before Hodder cuts them off. He never got the memo on adverbs.

This is the steampunk novel I have read, and I am not the best audience. I don't care about the gadgetry, and the gadgetry seems to be much of the attraction here. On the other hand, I am a sucker for time travel sto...more
Tarl
The first thing about this book is that it's LONG. Half way through I was starting to look at the pages left and wondering just how much longer I had to go. There is an awful lot of detail in this book, some of it a bit tedious and rather uninteresting. I loved the world, I loved the things that came from it, especially the different factions and their play on the steampunk world.
That being said, this book suffers what most time travel books to, especially when one goes from the viewpoint of one...more
Sara
Okay, so it’s July, and you and I both know that at some point this summer you’ll have to crack open whatever book the schools have decided you need to read this summer. Fine, you gotta do what you gotta do. (Can you tell I’m no great fan of assigned summer reading?) Here, then, is my antidote to the summer reading assignment: “The Strange Affair of Spring Heeled Jack,” by Mark Hodder (Pyr, 2010). It’s a rollicking, head-spinning steampunk adventure that is unlikely to find its way onto any summ...more
Kim  Ryser
A great steampunk novel. It's difficult to really get into what this book is about without spoiling it some. I went in blind, and it was really fun to read and figure out what's going on as you read, so if you prefer, just go read this book and don't read the rest of my review.

Ok, they're gone. So the book is about Sir Richard Francis Burton, who is asked by the Prime Minister to look into some strange happenings in London. It becomes apparent that we're dealing with an alternate Victorian peri...more
Forrest
The only reason you can’t hear me giggling like a lifetime Bedlamite right now is because I accidentally corrupted the recording I made while I was finishing The Strange Affair. Hodder’s alternate history of the early years of Victorian England is the best iteration of the modern penny dreadful I’ve ever read. It doesn’t set out be funny, but the final product is so completely over the top that it’s hard not to laugh at the villainous caricatures and bizarre steampunk contraptions. At the same t...more
Laurie
As the long title suggests, Sir Richard Francis Burton and Algernon Swinburne, real Victorians, are the lead characters in this novel that is at once mystery, fantasy, alt history and steampunk. And possibly a few other things, too. It includes not just not just real people Burton and Swinburne, but also Darwin, Galton, Isambard Kingdom Brunel, Florence Nightingale and Oscar Wilde, among others. Add airships (but not, alas, dirigibles), flying arm chairs, foul mouthed parakeets that act as messe...more
Mike (the Paladin)
I suppose after consideration, that maybe I'm just not going to be a fan of "Steam Punk". I've tried several books, I'll read the synopsis and think "wow, good idea, I should like this". I get the book, I go in expecting to be interested and to like the novel....but I don't.

Pretty much the same here. I considered giving the book 3 stars. I just couldn't justify going that high when by the end of the book I'd lost interest, didn't care much about the characters and was fairly glad to see it end....more
Libby
This is an amazing book. It is not at all my usual cup of tea, but its hero(?) is Sir Richard Francis Burton, whose career has always fascinated me, so I tried it. A page and a half into the book I was utterly captured. Its milieu is an alternate London in the mid 1800's, a world where/when Victoria has been assassinated and Albert reigns over a bizarre technological revolution. The eminent Victorians (Albertians?) featured in the plot include Florence Nightengale, Oscar Wilde, Isambard Kingdom...more
Mary Rose
I could (and would prefer to) have read an entire book about Swinburne being a poetic, masochistic and amusing delight while Burton grumps around about Africa and young Oscar Wilde is adorable. To hell with Charles Darwin the absurd cartoon villain and Spring-Heeled Jack, the futuristic gutter-mouth who cares way too much about his family history to be a realistic portrayal of some guy from the twenty-first century. This was, unfortunatelty, not the case. As is, it's fairly standard Steampunk wi...more
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The Strange Affair of Spring Heeled Jack (Burton & Swinburne, #1)
The Strange Affair of Spring Heeled Jack (Burton & Swinburne, #1)
The Strange Affair of Spring Heeled Jack (Burton & Swinburne, #1)
The Strange Affair of Spring Heeled Jack (Burton & Swinburne, #1)
Dziwna sprawa Skaczącego Jacka (Burton & Swinburne, #1)

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British writer living in Valencia, Spain.

Mark Hodder is the creator and caretaker of the Blakiana: The Sexton Blake Resource web site, which he designed to celebrate, record, and revive Sexton Blake, the most written about fictional detective in English publishing history.

A former BBC writer, editor, journalist, and Web producer, Mark has worked in all the new and traditional medias and was based...more
More about Mark Hodder...
The Curious Case of the Clockwork Man (Burton & Swinburne, #2) Expedition to the Mountains of the Moon (Burton & Swinburne, #3) A Red Sun Also Rises The Master Mummer's Mummy Great Great Great (And So Forth) Uncle Dragoslav

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