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[34] Similarly, The Daily Telegraph 's Tim Robey awarded Mortal Engines 2/5 stars, describing the film as a "mechanical, soulless dystopian theme park ride to nowhere." [35] Variety reviewer Andrew Barker praised Mortal Engines 's opening chase sequence but criticized the "unwieldy, baffling, exhausting, and unintentionally hysterical" plot ...
Mortal Engines is a young adult science fiction novel by Philip Reeve, published by Scholastic UK in 2001. The book focuses on a futuristic, steampunk version of London, now a giant machine striving to survive on a world that is running out of resources. Mortal Engines is the first book of a series, the Mortal Engines Quartet, published from ...
The pages in this category are redirects from Mortal Engines fictional elements. To add a redirect to this category, place {{ Fictional element redirect |series_name=Mortal Engines}} on the second new line (skip a line) after #REDIRECT [[Target page name]] .
The Mortal Engines Quartet is a science fiction and fantasy novel series by Philip Reeve. Subcategories This category has the following 4 subcategories, out of 4 total.
He began the first volume of the series, Mortal Engines, in the 1980s, and it was published in 2001. Reeve then published three further novels, Predator's Gold (2003), Infernal Devices (2005), and A Darkling Plain (2006). [3] The series is set thousands of years in the future, after the Sixty Minute War has devastated Earth.
The Fever Crumb series is the title of a series of novels written by British author, Philip Reeve, and is the prequel series to his Mortal Engines Quartet.The series consists of three books: Fever Crumb (2009), A Web of Air (2010), and Scrivener's Moon (2011).
The Book, bearing the insignia of the President of the United States of America, contains the activation codes for the final remaining orbital weapons left over from the Sixty Minute War; potentially with firepower far greater than that of MEDUSA, which destroyed the Traction City of London in Mortal Engines. After meeting former Lost Boy now ...
The survivors have set a course for North America, which is believed to be a radioactive wasteland since the Sixty Minute War. The city is ruled by the young margravine Freya Rasmussen, who treats all three of them as honoured guests and appoints Pennyroyal as the city's chief navigator because of his past experiences (detailed in his book ...