In 1986, K. W. Jeter coined the term steampunk, applying it to his first
Victorian-era science fiction alternate-history adventure. At last he
has returned with a new tale of George Dower, son of the inventor of
Infernal Devices, who has been in self-imposed exile...accumulating
debt.
The world Dower left when he went into hiding was significantly simpler
than the new, steam-powered Victorian London; a mad whirl of
civilization filled with gadgets and gears in the least expected places.
After accepting congratulations for his late father's grandest
invention--a walking, steam-powered lighthouse--Dower is enticed by the
prospect of financial gain into a web of intrigue with ominously
mysterious players who have nefarious plans about which he can only
guess.
If he can make his father's Vox Universalis work as it was intended, his
future is assured. But his efforts are confounded by the strange Vicar
Stonebrake, who promises him aid, but seems more interested in
converting sentient whales to Christianity than in helping George.
Drugged, arrested, and interrogated by men, women, and a steam-powered
Prime Minister, Dower is trapped in a maelstrom of secrets, corruption,
and schemes that threaten to drown him in the chaos of this mad new
world.
"This is the real thing--a mad inventor, curious coins, murky London
alleys, and windblown Scottish Isles.... A wild and extravagant plot
that turns up new mysteries with each succeeding page." --James P.
Blaylock on Infernal Devices
"Jeter is a modern Arthur Conan Doyle.... [Fiendish Schemes] reads
[like] a Sherlock Holmes adventure." --Tee Morris, author of the
Ministry of Peculiar Occurrences series