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[personal profile] pyat
Also, I'm reading an awesome book written in 1894, about the frightening future world of 1910. I'm on page 30 and there's already been a mad scientist, evil Germans, a flying submarine, and a comet that's going to blow up the Earth. It's heady stuff! The author was out-selling HG Wells by a considerable margin back in the 19th century, and is almost forgotten today.

For a fan of what is now called "Steampunk," it is good to turn one's back, from time to time, on the modern pastiche that represent the genre, and get back to the source. Not that there is a source, really, since these books were being written in a time when stories of this kind were not yet even classified with the Gernsbackian term, "scientificition".

A sample of the text:

"I shall not state my price in money, your Majesty. I am not working for money, but you will understand that I cannot convert what I have shown you to-day into the fighting reality. Only a nation can do that. It will cost ten millions of marks, at least, to — well, to so far develop this experiment that no fleet save your Majesty's shall sail the seas, and that no armies save yours shall, without your consent, march over the battlefields of the world's Armageddon."

"Make it twenty millions, fifty millions," laughed the Kaiser, "and it will be cheap at the price."


The Mad Scientist is selling his evil experiment to the freaking KAISER. How cool is that?

Date: 2008-01-08 02:53 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] scodiddly.livejournal.com
What would be even more cool would be for you to tell us the name of the author. :)

Date: 2008-01-09 01:23 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pyat.livejournal.com
George Griffiths! And the book is "The World Peril of 1910".

Date: 2008-01-08 03:08 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dagoski.livejournal.com
There's an obscure Edgar Rice Burroughs book entitled something like Crossing Forty that envisions a prosperous US that isolated itself from the slaughter of WWI while the Europeans destroyed themselves. It was a great read and it had aero-submarines!

Date: 2008-01-09 01:25 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pyat.livejournal.com
I think I may have even read that one!

Date: 2008-01-08 03:09 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] doc-mystery.livejournal.com
Sounds like fun! What's the name of this SFnal tawdry gem?

::B::

Date: 2008-01-09 01:23 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pyat.livejournal.com
The World Peril of 1910

Date: 2008-01-09 01:25 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] doc-mystery.livejournal.com
Aha!

Here's the link to the Forgotten Futures 9 page that has a link to full text copy of this Victorian/Edwardian wonder.

http://forgottenfutures.com/game/ff9/

::B::

Date: 2008-01-08 02:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] iridium-wolf.livejournal.com
So what book is this?

Date: 2008-01-09 01:24 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pyat.livejournal.com
The World Peril of 1910

Date: 2008-01-08 06:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] paka.livejournal.com
Not impossible. Remember that the mitreilleuse was something the French Army didn't purchase; Napoleon II paid for it out of his own pocket. Similarly, the Belgian Congo was Leopold's personal fief and did not actually belong to Belgium until he died.

Date: 2008-01-09 01:25 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pyat.livejournal.com
Oh, certainly not impossible. Just cool. :)

Also, I was just reading about Napoleon III and the Franco-Prussian War today!

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