marycatelli (
marycatelli) wrote in
books2020-02-07 06:55 pm
The Ball and the Cross
The Ball and the Cross by G.K. Chesterton, illustrated by Ben Hatke
This work touches on steampunk, and fantasy, and dystopian novels. But what it chiefly is is a philosophical thriller.
It opens with a debate between two characters who feature later, in an airship. But the chapter ends with a young man breaking a window, and the story takes off with that young man, a Catholic named MacIan, and the atheist whose window he broke, Turnbull, chasing around England trying to escape the police so they can fight a duel.
It features a car accident, a borrowed yacht, buying diplomacy in a shop, many long discussions, beer, swords, champagne, sunsets and sunrises, and much more.
This work touches on steampunk, and fantasy, and dystopian novels. But what it chiefly is is a philosophical thriller.
It opens with a debate between two characters who feature later, in an airship. But the chapter ends with a young man breaking a window, and the story takes off with that young man, a Catholic named MacIan, and the atheist whose window he broke, Turnbull, chasing around England trying to escape the police so they can fight a duel.
It features a car accident, a borrowed yacht, buying diplomacy in a shop, many long discussions, beer, swords, champagne, sunsets and sunrises, and much more.

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