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The Martian Ambassador cover art

The Martian Ambassador

By: Alan K. Baker
Narrated by: Michael Maloney
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Summary

London, 1899. It has been six years since the discovery of intelligent life on Mars, and relations between the two worlds are rapidly developing. Three-legged Martian omnibuses stride through the streets and across the landscape, while Queen Victoria has been returned to the vigour of youth by Martian rejuvenation drugs. Victorian computer technology is proceeding apace, thanks to the faeries who power the ‘cogitators’, while the first Æther zeppelins are nearing completion, with a British expedition to the Moon being planned for the following year. Everything seems to be going swimmingly, until Lunan R’ondd, Martian Ambassador to the Court of Saint James’s, dies while attending a banquet at Buckingham Palace.

The discovery of strange, microscopic larvae in his breathing apparatus leads Queen Victoria to suspect that he may have been the victim of a bizarre assassination. The Martian Parliament agrees, and they are not pleased. No Martian has ever died in such suspicious circumstances while on Earth.

An ultimatum is given: if Her Majesty’s Government cannot solve the crime and bring the perpetrator to justice, the Martians will! Enter Thomas Blackwood, Special Investigator for Her Majesty’s Bureau of Clandestine Affairs. Along with Lady Sophia Harrington, Secretary of the Society for Psychical Research, Blackwood is charged with the task of solving the mystery of Ambassador R’ondd’s death, before the Martians take matters into their own hands, possibly igniting an interplanetary war in the process!

©2012 Alan K Baker (P)2012 Audible Ltd

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Schiaparelli's Theosophical Sandwich Shop

Forteana-fuelled steampunk frolic through the play-pits of Wells and Verne with this first entry into the Blackwood and Harrington Mysteries. Similar to Kim Newman's Anno Dracula series or Alan Moore's League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, author Alan K. Baker crafts his alternate history London from a patchwork of obscure Victorian sources: Vril Energy, Andrew Crosse and the Spring Heel Jack sightings rub shoulders with a bureaucratic version of the Martians from War of the Worlds; Madame Blavatsky's Akashic Records are wittily reimagined as a proto-internet supervised by the Cottingley Fairies. Esoteric weirdness is drawn from other eras, too: Indrid Cold and the Comte de Saint Germain play important roles; the Knights Templar serve as the Metropolitan Police; more besides. Clever as some of this is, there is both too much going on and not enough. Baker creates a detailed, complex backdrop but doesn't charge the book with sufficient dynamic to bring it all to life. The occult Victoriana moves too swiftly into high magic and fairies before volte-facing into a pulp space opera; the villains are a boastful Bond blowhard and his remorseless killer, a pair who create little sense of danger despite all the carnage they wreak. The brief mentions of a Lovecraftian outer darkness of illimitable madness and horror are mere hints here. The plot is reasonable (similar to the unloved film version of LoEG) and the lead characters of Thomas Blackwood and Lady Sofia Harrington are fine, but it's all spread too thinly, the mystery becoming melodrama far too soon, the whole somehow lacking.
Still, it was pleasantly diverting as an audiobook, benefiting enormously from having the superb Michael Maloney on narration duties (due a bonus for soldiering on manfully through the trilling and interminable Martian conference scene where many a lesser narrator would have lost the will to live).
It sounds like I've damned this with faint praise but it was fun and with enough good ideas that I would give the next installment a listen; hopefully the parts click into place there.

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