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Die Glasbücher der Traumfresser: Roman…
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Die Glasbücher der Traumfresser: Roman (edition 2009)

by Gordon Dahlquist, Gordon Dahlquist (Author), Bernhard Kempen (Übersetzer)

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1,5486911,605 (3.41)70
It begins with a simple note: Roger Bascombe wishes to inform Celeste Temple that their engagement is forthwith terminated. But Celeste, for all her lack of worldly experience, is determined to find out why her fiancé should have thrown her over so cruelly. Adopting a disguise, she follows her erstwhile lover to the forbidding Harschmort manor, where she discovers a world--by turns seductive and shocking--she could never have imagined, and a conspiracy so terrifying as to be almost beyond belief.--From publisher description.… (more)
Member:debb1046
Title:Die Glasbücher der Traumfresser: Roman
Authors:Gordon Dahlquist
Other authors:Gordon Dahlquist (Author), Bernhard Kempen (Übersetzer)
Info:Blanvalet Taschenbuch Verlag (2009), Taschenbuch, 928 pages
Collections:Your library
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Work Information

The Glass Books of the Dream Eaters by Gordon Dahlquist

  1. 10
    The Little Book by Selden Edwards (freddlerabbit)
    freddlerabbit: These two books have, in my opinion, quite similar writing styles and concepts - the plots are not at all similar, however (Glass Books has no time travel)
  2. 00
    The Eterna Files by Leanna Renee Hieber (LongDogMom)
    LongDogMom: Similar style and writing
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» See also 70 mentions

English (68)  Dutch (1)  Swedish (1)  All languages (70)
Showing 1-5 of 68 (next | show all)
This book is long. Very, very long. The basic story is interesting, set in late Victorian times in a fictional country that could be on the Baltic or North Sea. The narrative jumps between the stories of the three heroes, who meet at various points and then separate. It deals with conspiracies at the highest levels of society, concerning a mysterious substance which captures the experiences of people who have been exposed to it. There are chases, fights, airships, captures, escapes, country houses, sinister geniuses, femmes fatales, all the elements of a cracking good adventure story. But it's just so long. It would read much better if a third of the book was just edited out. I really wanted to like it but in the end it was such a slog to get to the end that I didn't enjoy it much. ( )
  petermt | Dec 18, 2023 |
This was my 2nd try at this book. It just isn't for me. I reaaly wanted to like it and read to page 100 but I have too many other books to read and this one wasn't keeping my interests. ( )
  cdaley | Nov 2, 2023 |
In the end I found that I didn't like the book so much as I thought I would when I started reading it. ( )
  MaraBlaise | Jul 23, 2022 |
This book has three viewpoint characters,there is Celeste Temple the proper young lady,Cardinal Chang the assassin and Dr Svenson the man of doctoring and science.

Cardinal Chang first encounter Celeste on a train when she is covered in blood after going to the villains mansion to search for her fiancee to know why he vanished and broke it off so suddenly.I cant remember how the doctor enters the plot as he was pretty unmemorable and with all the other things you had to keep track of in this book you have to expect casualties.

So when I started reading this I had all my hopes up there would steampunk elements and good adventure throughout but I wasnt expecting all the eroticism that the backcover promises.

But when I first read it back in 2007 there was no mention of all that. So I guess it has been added later.

I dont have a trouble with sex in books I am not one of these people who only want "clean" reads but this one had me feeling a bit akward. In my head I thought of them as those awkward sexual scenes and made me wonder what purpose in bringing the plot forward they contributed to. There is a good reason the blurb of this book mentions "perverted religion" and "erotic literary adventure" because its a constant theme through the book.

The glass books of the title can be used to store a persons memories but it seems what most of them contain is memories of a sexual nature.I would have thought the technology could have some more practical use but then I am not part of twisted powerhungry cult who WANTS TO TAKE OVER THE WORLD.

And their evilest mastermind is a bi-sexual Contessa. :/

she even sexually harass the female main character...but its not that bad-for it releases the repressed WOMANPOWER in her. Yes remember when the blurb promised an erotic literary adventure? Thats it. Some people in other books get awesome powers but not Celeste,she only gets the power of realizing that being touched against her will totally made her break free of her role as a proper young innocent victorian lady. Now shes unstoppable!

I was surprised she didnt burn her corset

This author has a very odd notion about womens and their sexuality


At least thats what I assumed they wanted to do as much of the book confused me.Too many plotlines and too many unlikeable or easily forgettable characters didnt help either.

I know this though...sometimes I felt like I was trapped in the authors sexual fantasy world.


( )
  Litrvixen | Jun 23, 2022 |
I very much enjoyed this, but I'd have enjoyed it so much more if there had been an editor, half the length, and that it didn't keep feeling so much like a partwork with repetitive recapitulations in every chapter. ( )
  Andy_Dingley | Feb 16, 2022 |
Showing 1-5 of 68 (next | show all)
The Glass Books... is a piece of steampunk, a strand of Industrial Revolution sci-fi with a hardcore following in genre fiction and anime - as well as, it should be said, more than a whiff of Games Workshop about it. The classic texts are probably William Gibson and Bruce Sterling's The Difference Engine and, more recently, Alan Moore's immensely jolly League of Extraordinary Gentlemen comics, and this novel is nakedly indebted to both titles. Fans of Moore, particularly, will find themselves subconsciously ticking boxes as Dahlquist's narrative progresses: mysterious character who wears "smoked-glass spectacles" all the time - yes; sinister operations undertaken by chaps in diving-bell helmets and leather gauntlets - yes; airships - yes; lots of airships - yes. The plot goes something like this: a cabal of sinister aristos has discovered a substance that allows them to download human personalities and experiences into blue glass, a process that has the side-effect of making the subject entirely biddable to their demands. Ranged against them is a trio of accidental adventurers: a capable ingenue, a lovelorn mercenary and a strait-laced doctor, each of whom has his or her own reasons for wanting to topple the conspiracy.
 
Reading this book - and it is a page-turner - you become immersed, befogged, almost as if you had indeed been looking at one of the glass books. More than sex, what you're drugged by is fighting and pursuits: I've never seen violent physical action sustained over such a span in a novel. This intoxication is of a piece with the erotic thralldom the book projects, and it can become similarly cartoon-like: "The blow caught Starck squarely on the ear with a sickening, pumpkin-thwacking thud, dropping him like a stone."
added by simon_carr | editThe Guardian, Giles Foden (Jan 20, 2007)
 

» Add other authors (8 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Gordon Dahlquistprimary authorall editionscalculated
Antón de Vez, PatriciaTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Dassas, VéroniqueTraductionsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Maråk, SynnøveOvers.secondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Neville, AliceTraductionsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Ridder, SusanTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Rossem, Nina vanTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Sanchez, AlexandreTraductionsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Vroege, MireilleTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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From her arrival at the docks to the appearance of Roger's letter, written on crisp Ministry paper and signed with his full name, on her maid's silver tray at breakfast, three months had passed.
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Miss Temple was twenty-five, old to be unmarried, but as she had spent some time disappointing available suitors on her island before being sent across the sea to sophisticated society, this was not necessarily held against her.
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It begins with a simple note: Roger Bascombe wishes to inform Celeste Temple that their engagement is forthwith terminated. But Celeste, for all her lack of worldly experience, is determined to find out why her fiancé should have thrown her over so cruelly. Adopting a disguise, she follows her erstwhile lover to the forbidding Harschmort manor, where she discovers a world--by turns seductive and shocking--she could never have imagined, and a conspiracy so terrifying as to be almost beyond belief.--From publisher description.

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