The Secret of Abdu El Yezdi
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- $5.99
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- $5.99
Publisher Description
Philip K. Dick Award-winning author Mark Hodder continues his Burton & Swinburne Adventures with a steampunk adventure set in an alternate England teetering on the edge of annihilation…
After barely surviving his discovery of the source of the Nile, explorer Sir Richard Burton returns home to fame, glory, and a knighthood from his highness King George V. But he also receives another title―King’s Agent…for Burton may be the only man who can save England from doom.
Once he is brought into the king’s service, Sir Richard is trusted with a shocking truth: ever since the assassination of Queen Victoria, those in power have been guided and advised by a spirit―Abdu El Yezdi―whose wisdom has brought about incredible progress and prosperity.
Unfortunately, the voice of El Yezdi has fallen silent just as a controversial alliance is about to be formed with the Central German Confederation. More suspicious still are the disappearances of a number of England’s most brilliant thinkers and builders, with no clue as to who is responsible.
Now, aided by his own circle of unlikely and unconventional allies—including the devilishly lewd poet Algernon Swinburne—Sir Richard must delve into the darkest reaches of both the mystical and machine worlds if England is to survive a coming storm unlike anything ever imagined…
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Hodder's fourth Burton and Swinburne steampunk adventure is set in an imaginative alternate 1859, but mediocre characterization and historical name-dropping are all that pass for plot development. Legendary explorer Sir Richard Francis Burton is returning home from adventures abroad when one of his shipboard companions is murdered in a bizarre ritual. As several notable figures go missing, including Florence Nightingale and Charles Babbage, Sir Richard is appointed as a king's agent and instructed to find the missing Abdu El Yezdi, a ghost who has been guiding England's political and technological progress in an age of traveling steam spheres and cloning. Sir Richard's stumbling investigation mostly reads as an excuse to run into an encyclopedic list of late-19th-century English luminaries, and the ultimate reveal of the confusing time-twisting plot makes his cluelessness rather unlikely. Intricate worldbuilding is marred by Orientalism as Sir Richard's firm belief in British superiority colors his knowledge of other lands.