The Sword and Laser discussion
Sick of only finding Y.A. novels
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Holly
(last edited Nov 01, 2012 10:15AM)
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Nov 01, 2012 10:13AM

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The Vaginal Fantasy Book Club did The Iron Duke a few months back, and I was surprised at how good it was. I liked it as a steampunk book far better than Affinity Bridge, for sure. If you can deal with a few romance-novel tropes, give it a try.
Some of Ekaterina Sedia's recent work gets lumped in with steampunk. I liked Alchemy of Stone, Heart of Iron less so.
The Dream of Perpetual Motion goes for a very literary/magical realism take on steampunk. I couldn't get into it at the time, but it might be worth a look for you.

http://www.goodreads.com/list/show/61...
(Thought it was kind of funny to see H.G. Wells Time Machine there - but after thinking about it, it did make sense)

Holly wrote: "Thanks for all the tips. It just seems like Y.A. is permeating EVERY genre lately. Steampunk, Romance, Urban Paranormal even Sci-Fi, so far Cozies and Mystery seem to be left alone (I give it tim..."
Do not give people ideas!!! ;)
Do not give people ideas!!! ;)



Regardless, it's one of my favorite series and I look forward to it every year. It's pretty popular but if you don't know it, start with Storm Front and work your way from there ;)

Both authors got their start self-publishing on podiobooks.com.
There are also several collections of short stories that take place in the world, some written by them, others written by author friends.
Check them out.

And, if you're willing to look outside prose, the comic actually entitled "Steampunk" is adult in nature, though hard to find.
You also might find something on JukePopSerials.com. I know there's at least one steampunk offering on there, though I haven't read it, so can't vouch.

What upsets me is that I'll be looking for something new and start reading the description and not until I read the reader reviews does it mention being a Young Adult novel. I think that Amazon, B&N and others should maybe say in their own reviews or have a separate section that is Y.A. The other day I was looking up books with a magical element and the first 15 or so titles were Y.A. It's a little frustrating that you have to research and go through so many titles just to get to what you want.
And, again, Thanks for all the suggestions.

I have no idea if this is close enough to steampunk but Empire in Black and Gold. it has steampunk elements but i donno if someone could classify it as a true steampunk.

I don't mind this, I think young people should be reading and it should be age appropriate. However, couldn't it be separated from the adult versions of each genre? That I totally agree with!
How does one even go about trying to suggest a change of that magnitude to an older, stodgy, loathe-to-change industry like publishing?

I think the main issue is online browsing does not filter genres well when it comes to steampunk/YA genres. In store it is usually well segregated

I wouldn't group this with traditional steam-punk, but I can't recommend it highly enough. It is everything that is good about pulp literature, and the historical figure cameos are icing on the cake.
I'm a bit of a die-hard Larry Correia fan though.
Books mentioned in this topic
Viridis (other topics)Empire in Black and Gold (other topics)
Storm Front (other topics)
Leviathan (other topics)
The Affinity Bridge (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Larry Correia (other topics)Philippa Ballantine (other topics)
Tee Morris (other topics)
Ekaterina Sedia (other topics)