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The Jennifer Morgue
The Jennifer Morgue
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List Price: $25.95
Buy New: $14.95
You Save: $11.00 (42%)
Buy New/Used/Collectible from $10.94

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars(based on 24 reviews)
Sales Rank: 159367
Category: Book

Author: Charles Stross
Publisher: Golden Gryphon Press
Studio: Golden Gryphon Press
Manufacturer: Golden Gryphon Press
Label: Golden Gryphon Press
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published)
Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 340
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1
Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.3 x 1.3

ISBN: 1930846452
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6
EAN: 9781930846456
ASIN: 1930846452

Publication Date: November 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Similar Items:

  • The Atrocity Archives
  • Halting State (Ace Science Fiction)
  • Glasshouse
  • Saturn's Children
  • Toast

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Bob Howard?a T-shirt?wearing computer geek andfield agentfor the super-secretBritish government agency The Laundry?must save the world from eldritch horrors, codenamedJennifer Morgue,in this fast-paced spy thriller. Bob's current mission is to stop the evil Ellis Billingtonfrom achieving world domination, but he must overcome obstacles includingthe Gravedust device, which permits communication with the dead; destiny-entanglement protocol; banishment weapons; and Ramona Random, a lethal but beautiful agent for the U.S. counterpart to The Laundry. Billington plans to raisethe eldritch horror Jennifer Morgue from the vasty deeps, and communicate witha dead warrior for the purpose of ruling the world. Blending physics and applied mathematics with the practice of summoning and demonology, this spy-meets-horror novel will keep sci-fi fans on the edge of their seats. This volume also includes a bonus story, "Pimpf," featuring agent Bob Howard in the world of virtual gaming, as well as an afterword entitled "The Golden Age of Spying."




Customer Reviews:   Read 19 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Super Reader   September 27, 2008
What do you get if you cross

a) Lovecraft
b) James Bond
c) A bunch of computer geekery

The answer, in this case, is a really good book. Presuming you have some interest in any of the above.

The supervillain of the piece wants to control the world, of course, but with Deep Ones in the picture, it won't be pretty.

Stross plays with the Bond character types here, but the hitwoman is a halfing from Dunwich with a demon problem, for example. There's a geas that makes them follow the movie story patterns with a little help from an occult device that lets you talk to the dead. Ian Fleming, of course, is dead.

Someone who has Robert Howard as an alias playing a part in a Bond movie is a bit croggling, too.

Bob, of course, has nowhere near the budget for punting and wrecking stuff that 007 does, either, making do with his magic capable smartphone and a usb key with a linux distribution.

All lots of fun.

The story 'Pimpf' is included afterwards, as is a fictional non-fiction Wold-Newtonesque type piece on how the whole Bond spy thing fits into Bob Howard's world.

Pimpf

Bob Howard manages to get told off for not playing MMORPG's enough at work, given that is his current assignment, to stop real monsters gaining a foothold there.

He even gets an intern, asthe Laundry finds a kid who gets in deeper than he should while playing and hacking, and hands him to Bob. They go on a bit of a dungeon bash to save the day.


4.5 out of 5



5 out of 5 stars Super Reader   September 27, 2008
What do you get if you cross

a) Lovecraft
b) James Bond
c) A bunch of computer geekery

The answer, in this case, is a really good book. Presuming you have some interest in any of the above.

The supervillain of the piece wants to control the world, of course, but with Deep Ones in the picture, it won't be pretty.

Stross plays with the Bond character types here, but the female assassin is a halfing from Dunwich with a demon problem, for example. There's a geas that makes them follow the movie story patterns with a little help from an occult device that lets you talk to the dead. Ian Fleming, of course, is dead.

Someone who has Robert Howard as an alias playing a part in a Bond movie is a bit croggling, too.

Bob, of course, has nowhere near the budget for punting and wrecking stuff that 007 does, either, making do with his magic capable smartphone and a usb key with a linux distribution.

All lots of fun.

The story 'Pimpf' is included afterwards, as is a fictional non-fiction Wold-Newtonesque type piece on how the whole Bond spy thing fits into Bob Howard's world.

Pimpf

Bob Howard manages to get told off for not playing MMORPG's enough at work, given that is his current assignment, to stop real monsters gaining a foothold there.

He even gets an intern, asthe Laundry finds a kid who gets in deeper than he should while playing and hacking, and hands him to Bob. They go on a bit of a dungeon bash to save the day.


4.5 out of 5



4 out of 5 stars Great SF but not the best by Stross   July 18, 2008
I've become a great fan of Charles Stross. I think his earlier books accelerando and even glasshouse are master pieces. I also love "the mearchants war" series of fantasy.

This book, the Jennifer Morgue, are a follow on to the Atrocity Archives. It is not as good as the Atrocity archives but close. This probably because I like Lovecraft more then Flemming. The Archives where a "parody" of Lovecraft's style and this one more on Ian Flemming. The books are not parody per se but borrows a style. I wonder what style he will do next, the rumors says spy thriller.

The story is fast paced and hilarious and Stross has a great ability to make the absurd seem reasonable and logic. The fact that the hero struggles with department bureaucracy adds to the flavor.

I still miss Stross' harder SciFi but this is still a great (summer) read.



3 out of 5 stars early novel   June 10, 2008
An early novel very different from his current work. A James Bond send-up. Science fiction, James Bond and magic--what could be better? His current novels are much better.


4 out of 5 stars James Bond meets Chtulhu   April 9, 2008
Spys, tentacled horrors from the abysses of space and ocean, last minute rescues, sly humor, and, above all, clever writing makes this second installment of the escapades of the Bob Howard & other Laundry employees makes you hope there will be more tales in this series.

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