The Gilded Scarab cover art

The Gilded Scarab

Lancaster's Luck, Book 1

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The Gilded Scarab

By: Anna Butler
Narrated by: Gary Furlong
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About this listen

Book one in the Lancaster's Luck M/M steampunk trilogy.

When Captain Rafe Lancaster is invalided out of the Britannic Imperium's Aero Corps after crashing his aerofighter during the Second Boer War, his eyesight is damaged permanently, and his career as a fighter pilot is over. Returning to London in late November 1899, he's lost the skies he loved, has no place in a society ruled by an elite oligarchy of powerful Houses, and is hard up, homeless, and in desperate need of a new direction in life. Everything changes when he buys a coffeehouse near the Britannic Imperium Museum in Bloomsbury, the haunt of Aegyptologists. For the first time in years, Rafe is free to be himself.

In a city powered by luminiferous aether and phlogiston, and where powerful men use House assassins to target their rivals, Rafe must navigate dangerous politics, deal with a jealous and possessive ex-lover, learn to make the best coffee in London, and fend off murder and kidnap attempts before he can find happiness with the man he loves.

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.

©2019, 2020, 2022 Anna Butler (P)2022 Decent Fellows Press
Romance Science Fiction Steampunk Suspense Thriller & Suspense Fiction England

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All stars
Most relevant
I highly recommend if the title's topics are your cup of tea!
This thoroughly enjoyable story brings us to the alternate Victorian London where many things are familiar but others new and imaginative.
The narrator did an awesome job in making the entire cast of characters alive in my ears and managed to make their speech patterns as well as their vocabulary surprisingly credible for a non-linguistic historian.

A perfect storm of an intriguing cyberpunk adventure, scorching hot M/M spice, and devastatingly slow burn!

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I really enjoyed the story, interesting works building, not too much focus on the romance or smexy times, which I prefer, looking forward to the next book, would recommend

Really enjoyed it..

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Narrator was great. And the writing was good. I was disappointed by the lack of plot/story. I was expecting steampunk mystery/romance maybe with interesting take on empire. it wasn't. it was slow romance with inconsitancy in world building re homophobia and lots of no plot fantasy porn. I don't know if it was written by a straight woman who's never actually met men who love men but likes to fantasize about them and fetishize empire but that's how it comes across

beautifully read formulaic trash

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This was one of those times where my brain didn't really compute what I was listening to. So clearly I wasn't in the best set of mind to read this one and the book in itself didn't help.

There were a lot of info dumps. Like quite a lot (and since my brain didn't process it, I was less frustated that in any other case but still)! The two first third of the book were also boring. Nothing really happened and I was wondering if the book had an actual plot. I thought that maybe I was reading a steampunk slice-of-life novel and I was NOT here for that! The last third of the book was where things started to be interesting. I felt like there was finally a real plot and the romance was moving forwards (the "real" love interest came back after disappearing for a good chunk of the story). So the last third part saved the book!

Honestly, I feel like I finished the book only because I read it in one sitting. Without that, I would have dnf it! And if it wasn't for the last part of the book, my rating would have been even lower.
Although I feel like I didn't really grab the world-building nor the political aspect (How the Houses work), I might read the sequel because the end was good and so maybe book 2 will be more action-packed/interesting.

A note: one of the best parts of the book was when Daniel was being a drama queen and Rafe was hating it and had sarcastic responds in his head! It made me laugh.

Mostly boring but promising

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A colourful canvas narrated to perfection. Victoriana/Egyptology/Gormenghast/Those Magnificent Men in their Flying Machines and steampunk blended with hints of Charles Dickens/KJ Charles' Any Old Diamonds (the Criterion Long Bar, a parure and the milieu of London's seedier passages, paths and population). Winter in Cairo is very chilly; it does infact snow every 40 years, so would recommend Luxor where it doesn't.

The copious embelished descriptions of an exciting time in history, crossed with what it could've been given the steampunk slant; too detailed and over long for some. My first time with "steampunk", a genre I have avoided as real history is always stranger than fiction, so never felt the urge to go there and may never again after this series. It was refreshing to have English English and not American English idioms or lexicon.

The MM relationships are slipped in (no pun intended) as part of the plot and not the key focus. Rafe, a steampunk wanabe "Biggles" is a rascal of the most endearing kind: enjoyed his actions and interactions.

I was hoping for something similar to the scintillatingly stimulating The Shooting Season (The Resurrectionists series by Isobel Starling), also narrated by Mr Furlong; they are hilariously scandalous tomes. Or Green Glass Beads by Josh Lanyon. Even The Affair of the Porcelain Dog by Jess Faraday, all non steampunk. I am not let down; this was enteraining: laugh out loud humour, dramatic quirks and quandries, good banter and diaglogue for our entertainment and enjoyment.

Have had so many "dud" books just lately, so wish I could click to get Book 2 NOW instead of having to read it on Kindle.

VERY ENJOYABLE

An Exquisite Blend

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