“The Gaslight
Chronicles” are finally brought to a close in Cindy Spencer Pape's
Ether and Elephants.
Note: Dragons & Dirigibles is the seventh story of the Gaslight Chronicles series. While the stories work well as stand-alones, there are inherent spoilers, especially where the romances are involved.
Miss Eleanor Caroline Jenkins Hadrian has had more than her share of
heartbreak in her short life. Once the assumed betrothed to her
childhood sweetheart Sir Thomas Devere, circumstances conspired to
keep them apart forever. Now at 25, she's become determined to live
life on her own terms.
Tommy's love life has hardly been all sunshine and roses, either. One
ill-advised night with a barmaid leaves him in a position that only
marriage can make right. And when his new bride runs off the day
after it's made legal (and she gets a hefty sum from him as well),
he's left with more questions than he knows what to do with.
This al comes to a head when Tommy and Nell are forced to work
together on a mission. Of late, Nell has been working as a teacher at
a boarding school for disabled children. When one of her pupils, with
a certain Gift for music, is taken in the night by family he
supposedly doesn't have, Nell is willing to throw everything else
away to find her lost lamb.
And when the name of her student's mother is suspiciously similar to
that of Tommy's youthful indiscretion...there might be more to this
mission than anyone thought.
This last venture into the universe of the Gaslight Chronicles takes
us from London to Calcutta, from Hadrian House to the land of Nell's
unknown paternity. Hearts are broken, and mended, and perhaps people
end up where they are meant to in the end.
Cindy Spencer Pape has given us eight wonderful stories in the
Gaslight Chronicles universe. From the four street kids who stumble
upon a den of vampyres has developed an extended family based on love
rather than bloodlines. There's plenty of places for the story to go
in the future, and perhaps someday Pape will return to this lovely
alternate London.
Highs:
If any story was meant to wrap up the Gaslight Chronicles, the story
of Nell and Tommy is perfect for it.
Lows:
I wish the dichotomy of the haves and the have-nots, as seen by two
street kids turned nobles, could have been developed more.
Verdict:
it's sad to see the end of a story, but the author does leave open
the possibility of future stories someday.
Further
Reading:
Soulless, God Save the Queen, 'The Strange Case of Finley Jayne'
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