When given the assignment to review Worldshaker, Richard Harland's latest novel for Young Adults, I was both excited and apprehensive. I have been a big reader of YA for many years—since before there was even a recognised 'genre' for such, possibly even before I was a young adult myself—and the Steampunk genre has long been a favourite, harking back to my initial childhood readings of Jules Verne.
The works of author Richard Harland are also well known to me. I read, and marvelled at, his Vicar of Morbing Vyle years before I was ever involved in the Australian speculative fiction community. Since then, Harland's work has become a staple of many genre anthologies and magazines released over the past few years and his novel The Black Crusade won the 2004 Golden Aurealis award.
Young Adult + Steampunk + Richard Harland!
Hence my excitement.
My apprehension stemmed from what I had originally heard of the novel, which wasn't much but that it involved enormous, steampunk, mobile cities.
Now, my favourite YA novel sequence of all time is Philip Reeve's Mortal Engines (aka Hungry Cities) quartet. The Mortal Engines series involves, as a major setting and plot point of the stories... enormous, steampunk, mobile cities.
Would Harland be touching upon the same themes as Reeve? Would I be able to divorce my reading of those previous novels from my enjoyment of Worldshaker? Had I already, too hastily, set Worldshaker into a category below my favourites?
I'm very happy to say that, with WorldShaker, the comparisons are in no way apt but the quality is right up there with the best. Richard Harland takes us to an altogether different place to other steampunk authors, a place a little darker... and a little bit more light hearted at the same time.
And this, I think, is Harland's gift; the offering of something that is, too all appearances, dark and gloomy but which leaves us smiling, and sometimes, even laughing out loud. He takes us to dark places but shows us that, even in the dank boiler rooms and engine rooms of life, there is always the absurdity and strangeness of human nature. Perfect things, I feel, to teach a young adult.
Worldshaker takes place on an alternative Earth still caught up, over one-hundred years after its end in our timeline, in a Victorian Era. Of the timeline diversion from our own, Harland said in an interview with ABC's Articulate, "The gothic-industrial reality of Queen Victoria II separated off from our reality when Napoleon's plan (historical fact!) to dig a tunnel under the English Channel actually came true. Then followed the Invasion of Britain, the Fifty Years War, the Age of Imperialism..." [original interview]
The action of the novel takes place entirely aboard the steam-powered, amphibious-mobile-city Worldshaker that plies the trade routes of the world. Colbert Porpentine is a young man set for life—he's from a distinguished family, grandson of Worldshaker's current Supreme Commander, and next in line to helm the mighty juggernaut city... until a girl from the boiler-rooms and engine-rooms below, a Filthy, finds her way into his room.
Thus begins an eye-opening adventure for Col as he is exposed to the true secrets behind the workings of Worldshaker. Dropped into the bowels of the city, he encounters another world, one far from his own and even further from the truth he was taught by his teachers and grandfather. Among the Filthies he is forced to confront the hypocrisy and ignorance of his own upbringing. The question is, what can Col do about it? Can he make a hundred years of horrible tradition right?
Worldshaker doesn't waste much time on exposition, which makes it a fairly fast-paced novel. The adventure starts on page one and, despite the novel being over 350 page long, never really slacks off. As well as the underlying themes of Industrialisation, Empire Building, Class Inequality, and Slave Labour, Harland serves up a plethora of exciting (and peculiar) characters and situations. Riff, the Filthy girl, is an especially strong and likeable character and her world below decks is suitably grim and depressing. Even the most obscure and lightly drawn side-characters are strengthened by absurd and evocative Gormenghast-esque names.
Overall, for me, Worldshaker is a great success. It treads in areas common to the Steampunk genre, but it's definitely wearing a different style of shoe. Never has YA Steampunk been both so grim and so amusing. To top all that off with a rip-roaring adventure and strong young male and female characters ensures that this should be a hit with its target market too. At least, I hope it does, because Worldshaker deserves to be enjoyed.
In the end, Worldshaker isn't Philip Reeve or Philip Pullman, but that's a darn good thing. Worldshaker is its own juggernaut of steam and coal-dust. It is Richard Harland doing what he does best, tearing across the page with steam-powered vigour—making us laugh, making us shudder, making us cheer and making us think. Now, he's also making me wait for a sequel!
Worldshaker by Richard Harland
Published by Allen & Unwin
ISBN: 9781741757095