After freeing England from Horde control, Rhys Trahaearn has built a merchant empire. And when Detective Mina Wentworth enters his dangerous world to investigate a mysterious death, Rhys intends to make her his next conquest.
This is one of my all-time favorite books! Set in a steampunk world, The Iron Duke is storytelling at its very best.
Author
jill
3 years ago
This steampunk series is amazing. I’ve read Meljean Brook books over and over because they are just THAT good! This is the first book in the Iron Seas series, the novella “THe Blushing Bounder” is 0.4 and “Here There Be Monsters” is 0.5 of the series if you want to start in order. I love “The Iron Duke” because the female character, Mina Wentworth, is fierce and determined to do her job. She has courage and stands up for herself. She doesn’t need a hero to rescue her, but then Rhys Trahaearn is going to try.
Meljean Brook’s world-building is phenomenal, she put the “steam” into steampunk. The book and the series have nanotechnology mixed with pirates, adventure, romance, and mystery. Why are you still reading this? Go get started on The Iron Seas series!
Author
alanadelacroix
3 years ago
Enjoy steampunk mixed with high tech? Scathing social commentary on class and race? This has you covered. Detective Inspector Mina is called to investigate a body found on the property of the man who saved England from the Mongol Horde that invaded and enslaved the country. The body’s only the first step in a mystery that ends up stretching across the globe (via that steampunk standard, the airship, which I sincerely wish we used on the regular these days) on a search for a missing Navy ship and a devastating weapon.
Mina is a good character, well-drawn and layered, and the Iron Duke is also compelling—a man who usually does what he wants without thinking of the consequences but seems honestly ashamed when he screws it up.
Author
shirleyanneedwards
3 years ago
One of the best Steampunk romances I ever read.
Author
crafter1701
3 years ago
A great read, a wonderful steampunk world!
Author
jewlsbookblog
3 years ago
The world building started up confusing, but a few chapters in and I was soaking details up like a sponge! And the steampunk aspects to this book were superb! Flying ships, automatons, nanoagents, even the wicked Kraken was alluring! There’s just so much about this story I loved!
Rhys was a dominant personality and yes, he had some…not so brilliant moments with Mina that bugged me, but he grew and changed. He wasn’t as bad as I first thought, just cold and forceful. Happily, it turned out that he had a lot more depth than I was actually expecting, keeping me on my toes when I expected him to do the opposite of what he did.
Mina was the heart of this story! She was sharp, strong, and so fierce! Her protective nature overcame so many personal hurts, how could I not like her?! It’s no wonder she attracted Rhys attention and kept it without effort. I don’t think he expected to be caught in her snare, asking the chase quit entertaining.
The romance wavered before things settled in and got better. In the beginning, permission was questionable, both characters taking differing spins, yet the connection stayed strong and undeniable, gradually ending up in a good place for both Rhys and Mina. While I didn’t exactly like the first half of their ‘courthsip’, the latter half had all hands on deck in heavy pursuit!
It’s been years since I last read The Iron Duke, and I’m happy I enjoyed it just as much as before! The details that created the overall picture of an alternate London, the wonky romance, and especially the colorful characters and their deep pasts make this book a must read for anyone willing to jump into the steampunk genre!
Author
ktgrant
3 years ago
My review of The Iron Duke won’t do enough of justice. The entire time I read, my jaw was dropped in amazement. The Iron Duke has wowed me in some many ways. Meljean Brook is an author I’m loyal to, through and through. It’s a great feeling to have started with an author since the beginning of their writing career and watch them evolve and continue to astound with every single book they’ve written. The Iron Duke is mind-blowing in such a way that it may just turn the romance genre on its ear, including the Steampunk genre that still has many readers scratching their heads in confusion because they just can’t understand it.
The plot of The Iron Duke is one of the most complex I’ve read in a long time. The last author who made my head spin in such a way was Anne Bishop’s Black Jewels Trilogy. Bishop’s books have such intricate world-building, where it’s nearly impossible to explain it all. The same applies here with The Iron Duke. What I can tell you is that the world Meljean has created is a very scary and uncomfortable place, and one I wouldn’t want to live in. For the past two-hundred years, the Horde has ruled most of Europe, very much like a terrorist organization that sends fear into the hearts of many, including England. The Horde has far reaching hands, but those who were lucky enough to escape parts of Europe, mainly England, to America, are now slowly returning back to the land they left behind. The reason the British fell to the Horde was that the Horde hid things called nanogents, invisible bugs, into tea and sugar where they traded it very cheaply. Then the Horde the activated the bugs. This gave them control over the British. Can you just imagine, with a touch of a button, where someone has the power to make your body do whatever it wants? Or suppress your emotions where you don’t have the freedom to feel the way you want to? The Horde is able to do all this and so much more. And then one man rose up and went on a suicide mission to end the Horde’s slavery. Nine years ago, The Iron Duke, known as Rhys Tarhaearn, former pirate captain and recently titled Duke of Anglesey flew his ship into the Horde’s controlling tower, ending the Horde’s reign over England and becoming their national hero.
Detective Inspector Mina Wentworth knows the Iron Duke’s reputation very well. Mina’s parents are poor even with their Lord and Lady title, and their daughter is ridiculed and spit upon because Mina was conceived during a state function the Horde held where all the peers of the realm were required to attend. The Horde planned a Frenzy, forcing the guest to engage in sexual acts with anyone and anybody. Mina was the outcome and has Horde blood running through her veins. But an important fact to bear in mind is that Mina loves her parents and visa-versa. They protect and care for one another deeply.
Mina finds purpose in her job as an inspector, even though her latest investigation leads her straight to the Iron Duke’s doorsteps. A body has been dropped from an airship, and is some sort of warning against the duke. The Duke wants to handle matters himself, and away from the police, including “handling” Mina in his own special way. Mina refuses to succumb to the Iron Duke’s regard toward her, but has no choice but to let him join her on the investigation because what he wants, he gets.
Someone is building an invention, a weapon the Horde would use, if they could to take over England again. Mina has a personal stake in the case when her younger brother, who’s training aboard Rhys’s former air ship, which is used by the British Navy, has been hijacked and the crew held for ransom. Now Mina has to rescue her brother and try to save England at the same time.
Mina won’t be alone on this mission. Rhys will come with her, using not only his brains and former skill as a pirate, but along with a few trusted friends such as the Lady Yasmeen Corsair, the captain of her own airship, and Rhys’s close friend Scarsdale, a drunk who is afraid of heights, but has a man’s back during a fight. Mina has so much to lose because Rhys has targeted her for his own. He has laid claim to Mina, and the price he’s asking is too high for her to accept. Rhys is not one to take no for an answer, and soon he’s cutting away at Mina’s resolve where she wants to give into the desires The Iron Duke is offering regardless of the consequences.
Everyone so often I’ll have a call to action telling people to buy a book and drop any other book they’re reading at the moment. Here I am again with that call for The Iron Duke. There are not enough adjectives to describe what a wonderful experience I had while reading The Iron Duke. This is one book that makes me want to applaud because it’s so damn good. Meljean brings forth the steam, and I’m not just talking about the steam from the airships and machines within these pages. The things that come out of Rhys’s mouth in regards to what he wants to do to Mina, and then does to her, had me blushing. Hello? Me, your pervy KB blushing over a love scene? That takes immense skill from an author to be able to make me have such a reaction. The amount of times Rhys gives pleasure to Mina, and the way it’s describe in graphic detail, will make you melt into a pile of goo. This is one relationship that’s incredibly passionate and straight up sex on a stick. Something very important to keep in mind is that Mina is no pushover when it comes to Rhys. Poor Rhys never stood a chance with Mina. She is his salvation, and soon his reason for breathing.
There’s a combination of swashbuckling fights that brings to mind the 1935 movie, Captain Blood, ravenous, crazed zombies, and enough science fiction and fantasy to make you agog because Meljean makes it work so well together when it shouldn’t.
While reading The Iron Duke, I couldn’t stop thinking about the 1984 movie, The Terminator. There are many subtle instances of that movie within the story, mainly because of what the Horde made people become. The Iron Duke can be taken somewhat in the literal sense when it comes to Rhys, but make no mistake; he’s not a mindless machine, but very much a man who feels. If James Cameron ever got his hands on The Iron Duke, that movie would be a blockbuster of epic proportions.
If you don’t read The Iron Duke, you’re making a big mistake. The Iron Duke may be one of the most influential books published this year that I’ve read. Meljean, I applaud you, and invoke my phrase I use sparingly where, “I want to have babies” with The Iron Duke, and if I could, would roll around with it to soak up its excellence.
This is one of my all-time favorite books! Set in a steampunk world, The Iron Duke is storytelling at its very best.
This steampunk series is amazing. I’ve read Meljean Brook books over and over because they are just THAT good! This is the first book in the Iron Seas series, the novella “THe Blushing Bounder” is 0.4 and “Here There Be Monsters” is 0.5 of the series if you want to start in order. I love “The Iron Duke” because the female character, Mina Wentworth, is fierce and determined to do her job. She has courage and stands up for herself. She doesn’t need a hero to rescue her, but then Rhys Trahaearn is going to try.
Meljean Brook’s world-building is phenomenal, she put the “steam” into steampunk. The book and the series have nanotechnology mixed with pirates, adventure, romance, and mystery. Why are you still reading this? Go get started on The Iron Seas series!
Enjoy steampunk mixed with high tech? Scathing social commentary on class and race? This has you covered. Detective Inspector Mina is called to investigate a body found on the property of the man who saved England from the Mongol Horde that invaded and enslaved the country. The body’s only the first step in a mystery that ends up stretching across the globe (via that steampunk standard, the airship, which I sincerely wish we used on the regular these days) on a search for a missing Navy ship and a devastating weapon.
Mina is a good character, well-drawn and layered, and the Iron Duke is also compelling—a man who usually does what he wants without thinking of the consequences but seems honestly ashamed when he screws it up.
One of the best Steampunk romances I ever read.
A great read, a wonderful steampunk world!
The world building started up confusing, but a few chapters in and I was soaking details up like a sponge! And the steampunk aspects to this book were superb! Flying ships, automatons, nanoagents, even the wicked Kraken was alluring! There’s just so much about this story I loved!
Rhys was a dominant personality and yes, he had some…not so brilliant moments with Mina that bugged me, but he grew and changed. He wasn’t as bad as I first thought, just cold and forceful. Happily, it turned out that he had a lot more depth than I was actually expecting, keeping me on my toes when I expected him to do the opposite of what he did.
Mina was the heart of this story! She was sharp, strong, and so fierce! Her protective nature overcame so many personal hurts, how could I not like her?! It’s no wonder she attracted Rhys attention and kept it without effort. I don’t think he expected to be caught in her snare, asking the chase quit entertaining.
The romance wavered before things settled in and got better. In the beginning, permission was questionable, both characters taking differing spins, yet the connection stayed strong and undeniable, gradually ending up in a good place for both Rhys and Mina. While I didn’t exactly like the first half of their ‘courthsip’, the latter half had all hands on deck in heavy pursuit!
It’s been years since I last read The Iron Duke, and I’m happy I enjoyed it just as much as before! The details that created the overall picture of an alternate London, the wonky romance, and especially the colorful characters and their deep pasts make this book a must read for anyone willing to jump into the steampunk genre!
My review of The Iron Duke won’t do enough of justice. The entire time I read, my jaw was dropped in amazement. The Iron Duke has wowed me in some many ways. Meljean Brook is an author I’m loyal to, through and through. It’s a great feeling to have started with an author since the beginning of their writing career and watch them evolve and continue to astound with every single book they’ve written. The Iron Duke is mind-blowing in such a way that it may just turn the romance genre on its ear, including the Steampunk genre that still has many readers scratching their heads in confusion because they just can’t understand it.
The plot of The Iron Duke is one of the most complex I’ve read in a long time. The last author who made my head spin in such a way was Anne Bishop’s Black Jewels Trilogy. Bishop’s books have such intricate world-building, where it’s nearly impossible to explain it all. The same applies here with The Iron Duke. What I can tell you is that the world Meljean has created is a very scary and uncomfortable place, and one I wouldn’t want to live in. For the past two-hundred years, the Horde has ruled most of Europe, very much like a terrorist organization that sends fear into the hearts of many, including England. The Horde has far reaching hands, but those who were lucky enough to escape parts of Europe, mainly England, to America, are now slowly returning back to the land they left behind. The reason the British fell to the Horde was that the Horde hid things called nanogents, invisible bugs, into tea and sugar where they traded it very cheaply. Then the Horde the activated the bugs. This gave them control over the British. Can you just imagine, with a touch of a button, where someone has the power to make your body do whatever it wants? Or suppress your emotions where you don’t have the freedom to feel the way you want to? The Horde is able to do all this and so much more. And then one man rose up and went on a suicide mission to end the Horde’s slavery. Nine years ago, The Iron Duke, known as Rhys Tarhaearn, former pirate captain and recently titled Duke of Anglesey flew his ship into the Horde’s controlling tower, ending the Horde’s reign over England and becoming their national hero.
Detective Inspector Mina Wentworth knows the Iron Duke’s reputation very well. Mina’s parents are poor even with their Lord and Lady title, and their daughter is ridiculed and spit upon because Mina was conceived during a state function the Horde held where all the peers of the realm were required to attend. The Horde planned a Frenzy, forcing the guest to engage in sexual acts with anyone and anybody. Mina was the outcome and has Horde blood running through her veins. But an important fact to bear in mind is that Mina loves her parents and visa-versa. They protect and care for one another deeply.
Mina finds purpose in her job as an inspector, even though her latest investigation leads her straight to the Iron Duke’s doorsteps. A body has been dropped from an airship, and is some sort of warning against the duke. The Duke wants to handle matters himself, and away from the police, including “handling” Mina in his own special way. Mina refuses to succumb to the Iron Duke’s regard toward her, but has no choice but to let him join her on the investigation because what he wants, he gets.
Someone is building an invention, a weapon the Horde would use, if they could to take over England again. Mina has a personal stake in the case when her younger brother, who’s training aboard Rhys’s former air ship, which is used by the British Navy, has been hijacked and the crew held for ransom. Now Mina has to rescue her brother and try to save England at the same time.
Mina won’t be alone on this mission. Rhys will come with her, using not only his brains and former skill as a pirate, but along with a few trusted friends such as the Lady Yasmeen Corsair, the captain of her own airship, and Rhys’s close friend Scarsdale, a drunk who is afraid of heights, but has a man’s back during a fight. Mina has so much to lose because Rhys has targeted her for his own. He has laid claim to Mina, and the price he’s asking is too high for her to accept. Rhys is not one to take no for an answer, and soon he’s cutting away at Mina’s resolve where she wants to give into the desires The Iron Duke is offering regardless of the consequences.
Everyone so often I’ll have a call to action telling people to buy a book and drop any other book they’re reading at the moment. Here I am again with that call for The Iron Duke. There are not enough adjectives to describe what a wonderful experience I had while reading The Iron Duke. This is one book that makes me want to applaud because it’s so damn good. Meljean brings forth the steam, and I’m not just talking about the steam from the airships and machines within these pages. The things that come out of Rhys’s mouth in regards to what he wants to do to Mina, and then does to her, had me blushing. Hello? Me, your pervy KB blushing over a love scene? That takes immense skill from an author to be able to make me have such a reaction. The amount of times Rhys gives pleasure to Mina, and the way it’s describe in graphic detail, will make you melt into a pile of goo. This is one relationship that’s incredibly passionate and straight up sex on a stick. Something very important to keep in mind is that Mina is no pushover when it comes to Rhys. Poor Rhys never stood a chance with Mina. She is his salvation, and soon his reason for breathing.
There’s a combination of swashbuckling fights that brings to mind the 1935 movie, Captain Blood, ravenous, crazed zombies, and enough science fiction and fantasy to make you agog because Meljean makes it work so well together when it shouldn’t.
While reading The Iron Duke, I couldn’t stop thinking about the 1984 movie, The Terminator. There are many subtle instances of that movie within the story, mainly because of what the Horde made people become. The Iron Duke can be taken somewhat in the literal sense when it comes to Rhys, but make no mistake; he’s not a mindless machine, but very much a man who feels. If James Cameron ever got his hands on The Iron Duke, that movie would be a blockbuster of epic proportions.
If you don’t read The Iron Duke, you’re making a big mistake. The Iron Duke may be one of the most influential books published this year that I’ve read. Meljean, I applaud you, and invoke my phrase I use sparingly where, “I want to have babies” with The Iron Duke, and if I could, would roll around with it to soak up its excellence.