Hughes is an <b>undeniably unique wordsmith</b> . . . [<i>The Black Locomotive]</i> manages to communicate an <b>excited and passionate vision</b> while holding fast to a nostalgic affinity that <b>warms the bones of any would-be industrial revolutionary.</b>
Sci Fi Now
What? A gigantic spaceship from prehistory discovered under London and the only way in is with a pre-war steam engine, hidden in secret government tunnels? The problem is knotty but the solution worthy of a <i>Boy’s Own</i> comic in this conceptually complex, <b>graphically gorgeous, full-steam-ahead masterpiece</b>.
The Daily Mail
Rian Hughes’s graphic-design extravaganza hits the rails screeching, wailing and showering sparks . . . Part a callback to science fiction’s New Wave, part architect’s coffee-table must-have, part ripping yarn.
The Times
What’s to be said about a book that blends boys’ own adventures with semiotics, complex sci-fi with steam engines, conspiracy theory with discourses on urban planning? Only that something <b>so cleverly conceptual, ridiculously romantic and utterly unique </b>must be the new Rian Hughes.
The Daily Mail
The genius of Hughes is that he pulls off wild flights of fancy with a swagger and confidence that are utterly convincing . . . <b>If only all fiction was this adventurous and original.</b>
The Big Issue
A <b>brilliantly original</b> novel of literary SF from the acclaimed author of <i>XX</i>, <i>The Black Locomotive </i>weaves steam trains, the history and architecture of London, and a mysterious alien artefact below the city into <b>a work of stunning inventiveness and originality</b>.
The Guardian
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Rian Hughes is a graphic designer, illustrator, comic artist, writer and type designer who has worked extensively for the British and American advertising, music and comic book industries.
He has written and drawn comics for 2000AD and Batman: Black and White, and designed logos for The Avengers, The X-Men, Superman, record label Hedkandi, MTV and James Bond. He has edited books on mid-century lifestyle illustration and custom typography, and written on semiotics, culture, and collecting vintage science fiction pulps and paperbacks.
He lives in London.