What the media and websites are saying:
'A novel of desire, sensation and desperate jeopardy . . . a world of thrilling perversity and brutal violence . . . exciting and intriguing, each episode churns with adrenaline and leaves us suspended over a gulf of anxiety for the characters fates' ***** Time Out
'Bodice-ripping' Elle
'Wilkie Collins on acid' New Statesman
'A page-turner - you become immersed. As stupendous as it is stupefying . . . a rollicking ride' Guardian
'Web serial novel with a Dickens of a plot.’ Evening Standard
‘This first instalment of ten takes us at full lick into a novel of desire, sensation and desperate jeopardy … from a starting point of prudish respectability Celeste’s adventures take her through the crust into a world of thrilling perversity and brutal violence … genuinely exciting and intriguing. Each episode churns with adrenaline and leaves us suspended over a gulf of anxiety for the characters’ fates; if the serial is to return, this is the book to do it.’ Time Out
‘Think of The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes: its lurid plots, its murky pea-soupers. Now, apply the production values of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, commission a re-write by the Marquis de Sade – oh, and lose Sherlock and replace him with Barbarella … it’s literally a ripping yarn.’ thelondonpaper
‘Reminiscent of a Harry Potter for grown ups, tingling, fascinating, exciting and impossible to put down.’ Inthenews.co.uk
‘The physical objects are so lovely, so nicely designed … it’s awfully swell to print a set as handsome as these.’ Cory Doctorow, Boing Boing
‘Magnificent … compelling … seductively tense.’ AV. Club
‘Cruelly but wonderfully leaving you on tenterhooks at the end of each chapter you’ll be pacing the floorboards as you wait for the next instalment.’ Marmaladya.com
‘i just finished the first installment of 10 it's lots of fun already, and really nice to read a book in a weekly installment like that. The origins of tv serials i suppose. Very exciting and...in some way the cliffhangers make you really impatient to get stuck in to the next book this friday.’ JeremyGetsCash & Jeremy Mac Lynn, www.jeremygetscash.com
‘I was very excited to find the first chapter of The Glass Books Of The Dream Eaters on my doormat this morning … the installment looks great. The design and attention to detail feel perfectly matched to the content, and I'm sure the quality of the overall execution will make the series highly collectible. Waiting for next week's chapter is almost like waiting for the next episode of Lost. Sweet agony.’ The Suspension Bridge
‘It’s really brilliant!’ Lauren Cerand
‘Just received my set – they are great. Pride of place on my new book shelves.’ Nick Stringer, Channel 4
What the bloggers are saying:
‘Making Mondays bearable for the next nine weeks’ Suchahit
Readers on The Book Bar blog:
‘mine has just arrived too and it all looks most exciting’
‘And now I've read it and I'm intrigued more than in a state of suspense and slightly afeared for what may be coming next in terms of content.’
‘Exciting beginning, don't you think? Love all the costume detail of the masked ball, and Miss Temple's rather prissy ways thrown into disarray by the heady air of eroticism and mystery... And I think it's a perfect length as well, I read it in two sittings, but you could easily do it in one. So, a great start, and I'm really looking forward to this developing over the coming weeks.’
Readers on dovegreyreader:
‘What fun! I'd love to subscribe to the periodical numbers of a thrilling novel as did the readers of the 19th century.’
‘Wow, that looks/sounds great!’
‘We were rather excited yesterday when this first instalment of The Glass Book of the Dream Eaters dropped onto our doormat…We love the idea of going so retro for a new book, especially in an age of e-paper, blogs and podcasts. There's a lot to be said for that sense of anticipation, waiting for the next instalment to arrive. The format is just over A5, with the cover printed onto an uncoated stock, and made to look a bit grubby…check out the elegant and ethereal’ We Made This
‘The serialised novel was an art the Victorians perfected, so the installments idea fits the 'Glass Books' really well - it's a gothicky/adventure set in a version of Victorian London that brings to mind William Gibson's/Bruce Sterling's The Difference Engine. Physically, the first installment is a lovely product. The art-work is excellent, with the book boasting a cover that's a perfect pastiche of that over-wrought, full-of-type Victorian news-stand style. The insides I'm enjoying, too…I raced through instalment one and was even dawdling on the tube platform on the way to work just to cram in a few more pages…roll on next week's installment...’ Treacle Down
‘I don’t get much in the post that I look forward to, but I couldn’t wait for this to arrive. The first installment dropped onto the doormat a few days ago, and although my dog nibbled the corner a little, I’ve been enjoying it ever since. Every Tuesday for the next 9 weeks, I’ll be waiting by the front door for the next installment. Huzzah!’ LordElph’s Ramblings
‘Simply wonderful. With their slim format, lilacy-blue colour and plethora of fonts they look gorgeous; they feel good too; and they smell... well, they smell of printed paper. I was hoping for parma violets or antique rose or something suitably evocative, but the fact that I sniffed them at all just shows how sensorially delighted I am! It looks like they're being playful with the author's biography too. Is he an ex-army doctor and playwright (of which there appears to be some corroborating evidence)? Is he a discredited historian? Could he possibly be both? I haven't read a page and I'm already hooked to find out what's next...’ Comfortable Disorientation
‘I did order up Glass Books Of The Dream Eaters and two chapters have so far arrived. And I am rather enjoying it. It is very cod Victorian and at present distinctly seedy. It is also rather intriguing as at present it seems to be simply a mess of weird conspiracies and I have no idea where they are going. It must be said that receiving it one chapter a week does stretch out the reading and so make me ponder it more. Normally I just inhale books. A painful experience if taken too literally. So it is nice to be forced to take my time over this one and actually think about what I am reading.’
Munchkinstein
‘Man, I’m psyched about reading the first installment of The Glass Books. Arrived this morning. It’s great to see a book turned into an event, especially when they take care over the design like this. It looks good and feels good, just as books are meant to be. Review coming soon - chapter 2 is due next week so I’d better get reading!’ Alan Bradburne
‘A cracking read so far, with the fact that each new installment arrives through the post rather than one being able to read the whole thing at once adding to the suspense and the sense of occasion. A bold yet somewhat provincial heroine, an brutal yet sympathetic anti-hero, secret decadence at masked balls, a mysterious and threatening device draining or perhaps redefining the will… I am most certainly looking forward to further episodes.’ Ordinal Malaprop