Arthur (Art) Mumby and his irritating sister Myrtle live with their father in the huge and rambling house, Larklight, travelling through space on a remote orbit far beyond the Moon. One ordinary sort of morning they receive a correspondence informing them that a gentleman is on his way to visit, a Mr Webster. Visitors to Larklight are rare if not unique, and a frenzy of preparation ensues. But it … it is entirely the wrong sort of preparation, as they discover when their guest arrives, and a Dreadful and Terrifying (and Marvellous) adventure begins. It takes them to the furthest reaches of Known Space, where they must battle the evil First Ones in a desperate attempt to save each other – and the Universe.Recounted through the eyes of Art himself, Larklight is sumptuously designed and illustrated throughout.
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Every person is entitled to his or her list of odd sci-fi fears, and this is one of mine:
O U T E R S P A C E.
It’s not so much the fear of what could be lurking in outer space, even though –TANGENT ALERT! – Stephen Hawking once stated that, if life in space does exist, and if it does try to contact us, we are utterly and totally out of luck because, really, what kind of culture is going to go to all the effort to travel to a whole new solar system just to extend an olive branch? Not any superior alien being, that’s for sure. And not even humans, really, because look at us: Every single time one group of people introduces itself to another, it’s usually to spread its own culture, or else wipe the other out. And if I was an alien, with my own crazy-super-advanced fleet of ships, and I saw a planet that looked like a cute little blueberry hanging out in space, I’d totally take over that fruit.
But no, it’s not aliens that I fear. It’s space itself. Yes, being able to look upon the earth and be overwhelmed by its blueberry beauty and the sudden realization that I really am just an insignificant little speck in the wider universe would be a marvelous, eye-opening, worldview-changing thing. But ultimately it comes down to fact that in space, there is no air, and if you smash your spaceship window when playing some space quidditch (‘cause I’d totally be playing some space quidditch), there is no hope for you.
If NASA could somehow transform space into the version we see in Larklight, however, I might be more willing to go.
Larklight by Philip Reeve is the first in a trilogy of steampunk novels, followed by Starcross and Mothstorm. Art and Myrtle Mumby are two siblings who, with their father, occupy the extraterrestrial house known as Larklight. Though they find this location completely boring, Larklight is a house that is MADE OF AMAZING (at least to this Earth-bound, architecture-loving reader); having been built to float through outer space, it is a structure where the halls can and do extend in every possible direction. The place is managed by robot servants and kept clean by hoverhogs (creatures that, in spirit, are half-pig, half-vacuum. I want one.), and Art passes his time trying to catch the various Aetheric Icthyomporphs (that is, space-fish-that-are-not-really-fish-but-just-look-like it) that float by Larklight, in hopes of discovering a new species. Oh, and it’s the 1800s. When Isaac Newton figured out how gravity worked back in the 1700s, humanity used his ideas to fling itself into space, so there are now colonies on Mars and even in the far reaches beyond the asteroid belt. Take that, modern science.
Art and Myrtle soon get their wish for excitement. When a much-anticipated but mysterious guest shows up on their doorstep, they find that he’s not quite the man they expect, literally. Disaster requires escape, and the adventure they escape into is one that spans the solar system, taken in the company of a notorious bunch of space pirates.
Usually I recommend Scott Westerfeld’s Leviathan as the ideal YA steampunk starter novel, but Larklight is becoming the novel that I recommend alongside it, as it shows the quirkier side of steampunk (and, really, the side that I’ve been yearning to see ever since I became a steampunk fan). Where Westerfeld’s steampunk is rooted at least somewhat in believable science and history, Reeve’s throws all that out the window. His steampunk only pays attention to the two when it’s fun, which is why Isaac Newton is the one credited with getting people into space, why lack of air does not seem to be such a big deal outside of spaceships, and why the main antagonists are giant talking spiders in bowler hats threatening to take over the solar system. You heard (read?) me. GIANT TALKING SPIDERS IN BOWLER HATS.
More of the same brand of oddity follows. The characters travel to Jupiter to have a chat with its Great Red Spot. They zip around the rings of Saturn, which are held together not by gravity but by spider webs. They battle against the famous Crystal Palace of Great Exhibition fame, except that, by this point in the story, it’s not just a giant glass building. It’s transformed into a giant robot spider—though it, sadly, does not wear a bowler hat. (I consider this a tremendous error on the part of the writer.)
The inventive quirkiness that permeates Larklight is easily one of the reasons why I enjoyed the novel as much as I did. One of the other things I liked about it is how utterly British it is. The book is rife with the florid, detailed language that is associated with Victorian England, but the language isn’t so elaborate that it becomes difficult to read. It’s just elaborate enough, though, that all of the text resonates with a decidedly British accent, which makes it that much more fun to read. The author even uses the language’s frilliness to an amusing advantage; most of the characters’ detailed observations in this book are simultaneously over-the-top, understated, and subtly hilarious. After hundreds of spiders overrun Larklight, encase it in webs, destroy the robot servants, and then (possibly) eat the Mumbys father, all Art says to explain the situation is, “I am afraid that something rather disagreeable has happened.” Only the British can experience something like that and remain so cool while talking about it.
Also, while I don’t especially care if bad language pops up in my books, one thing that impressed me about Larklight is now self-consciously clean it is. Some language is implied (there are pirates involved, after all), but the narrators are so utterly proper that they censor even the mildest of it—and they do it, miraculously, without being too prudish to turn readers off. That in itself is an impressive accomplishment on Reeve’s part.
All in all, Larklight has a lot to offer, especially for the reader who loves silly, planet-hopping adventures and British accents. Its author has also written a number of other steampunk novels, including the Hungry City Chronicles (a.k.a. Mortal Engines quartet) and Fever Crumb (which I just bought simply because its paperback cover is that awesome). I hadn’t read any of these before, but Larklight has made me curious to do so. And if Larklight is any indication, Mr. Westerfeld may have some competition as my favorite steampunk author.
This children’s trilogy is sheer delight from beginning to end. It’s incredibly witty and never dull. Don’t leave it to the kids!