Utterly beguiling, The Watchmaker of Filigree Street blends historical events with dazzling flights of fancy to plunge readers into a strange and magical past, where time, destiny, genius--and a clockwork octopus--collide. Jul 10, 2015  'The Watchmaker of Filigree Street' and author Natasha Pulley. (From left: Bloomsbury; Jonathan Ring / Bloomsbury) I am constantly hungry for friendships in fiction. Set in 1883, The Watchmaker of Filigree Street tells the story of Thaniel Steppleton, a telegraph operator in Britain’s Home Office who returns from work one day to find a watch in his rooms. An alarm on the watch saves him from an Irish bomb planted at Scotland Yard. Curious about the origin of the watch, he goes in search of its maker, who he suspects may be tied to the bombing. Korean movies with english subtitles.

The Watchmaker of Filigree Street. He meets Keita Mori, a Japanese immigrant who remembers the future. As Mori begins to tweak daily life in Thaniel’s favour, everything seems to be going well – until physicist Grace Carrow, attracted to Thaniel’s refreshingly direct, unstuffy nature, unwittingly interferes.

Natasha Pulley’s The Watchmaker of Filigree Street (Bloomsbury, £12.99) proves that well-worn genre tropes – in this case, gaslit steampunkish London and clockwork automata – can be invested with fresh lustre by combining elegant plotting, lashings of invention and jump-off-the-page characterisation. It is the 1880s and lowly telegraph clerk Nathaniel Steepleton finds that his house has been broken into and a mysterious pocket watch left in his bedroom. After he survives a Fenian bomb attack on Scotland Yard, thanks to the watch’s alarm, Nathaniel sets out to track down its maker, and locates the punctilious Mr Mori, the Japanese watchmaker of Filigree Street, who can see into the future. Soon, Nathaniel’s destiny is linked with that of Mr Mori – who he suspects might have had a hand in the bomb blast – and Oxford student Grace Carrow, an oddball who is researching the existence of luminiferous ether. How their stories combine, and how Pulley juggles the complex plot and throws in multiple surprises, are but two of the many delights of a first novel that has been garnering a lot of attention. The Watchmaker of Filigree Street is a charming and quietly profound disquisition on predestination, chance and fate.

Another first novel, Skin by Australian Ilka Tampke (Hodder & Stoughton, £12.99), blends historical fiction and fantasy to great effect. The setting is Albion, AD43, with the Romans massing for invasion and the Druidic way of life under threat. Ailia is a foundling, left on the doorstep of her tribe’s “cookmother” and raised as a lowly kitchen servant – for Ailia is without “skin”, or knowledge of family lineage, and as such is an outcast unable to marry and, at death, denied passage to the afterlife. We watch Ailia develop into a precociously intelligent young woman, fall in love with the magical Taliesin, and embark on a quest through Celtic Britain and mystical other worlds to find her skin. Skin is a page-turning novel of transcendence and change, personified by the development of Ailia, and set in a time when the magical lore of her people is under threat from inimical outside forces.

Sorcerer to the Crown by Zen Cho (Macmillan, £16.99) has been gathering much pre-publicity praise from big names in the field of fantasy and SF, with comparisons to Susanna Clarke’s Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell, the works of Georgette Heyer and even, bizarrely, PG Wodehouse. We’re in Regency England, and Zacharias Wythe, an orphan adopted by Sorcerer Royal Sir Stephen Wythe, takes on Sir Stephen’s hereditary title and becomes the country’s first black Sorcerer Royal. Meanwhile, another orphan, Prunella Gentleman, works for Mrs Daubney in the latter’s School for Gentlewitches. Prunella, ridiculed for her lack of parents by the school’s students, is a wonderful character: pragmatic, competent, with a feisty, can-do attitude. She also has her own powerful magical talent and harbours a desire to escape the school, facilitated by a chance meeting with Zacharias who is on a quest to the Fairy Court. Sorcerer to the Crown is a captivating debut that, aside from examining both gender and racial prejudice, tells an entertaining story with wit and consummate skill.

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The Ragthorn by Robert Holdstock and Garry Kilworth, first published in 1991 and winner of the World Fantasy award, appears here in book form for the first time (Infinity Plus, £7.99). The novella recounts Dr Alexander’s quest to trace the legend of the mythical ragthorn tree. In the 1880s his great uncle, scholar and archaeologist William Alexander, brought an ancient stone from Egypt to England and installed it as the lintel in his Yorkshire cottage. Soon after, in the grounds of Scarfell Cottage, the terrible ragthorn took root and encompassed the building. Dr Alexander, like his great uncle before him, is convinced that the tree possesses supernatural qualities, and this powerful novella charts his investigations of a tree that he believes crops up in Shakespeare, Milton, Chaucer and the Bible – an obsessive quest that culminates in his search for immortality.

In a change of pace after several SF novels, French-Vietnamese author Aliette de Bodard ventures into the realm of gothic fantasy and manages to create – despite the hoary premise of fallen angels and ancient curses – something startlingly and creepily original. The House of Shattered Wings (Gollancz, £20) is set in a ruined Paris after the devastating Great Magicians war. Fallen angels are divided into Houses that govern the city, though the angels themselves are in great danger from those who value the magical properties of their ground-up bones. We follow four principal characters – a newly fallen angel, an alchemist addicted to angel bones, an immortal magician from the east and the leader of the House of Silverspires – in a suspenseful thriller exploring who might be behind the curse that has brought Silverspires to ruination.

Eric Brown’s latest novel is Jani and the Greater Game (Solaris).

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Preview — The Watchmaker of Filigree Street by Natasha Pulley

(The Watchmaker of Filigree Street #1)

1883. Thaniel Steepleton returns home to his tiny London apartment to find a gold pocket watch on his pillow. Six months later, the mysterious timepiece saves his life, drawing him away from a blast that destroys Scotland Yard. At last, he goes in search of its maker, Keita Mori, a kind, lonely immigrant from Japan. Although Mori seems harmless, a chain of unexplainable ev..more
Published July 14th 2015 by Bloomsbury USA (first published July 2nd 2015)
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Popular Answered Questions
This question contains spoilers…(view spoiler)[Was anyone else caught off guard by the relationship between Thaniel and Mori? It came as a complete surprise to me; so much so that I had to reread the part where it came to fruition a couple times to make sure I wasn't misunderstanding. The lack of emotional description or build-up to it, or any reaction whatsoever by either character (relief, confusion, surprise), made this the most jarring part of the story for me (hide spoiler)]
Rochelle Mazar
This answer contains spoilers…(view spoiler)[ Not even slightly caught off guard. Their relationship was beautifully built, I thought. They had several moments of romantic awkwardness that should…more Not even slightly caught off guard. Their relationship was beautifully built, I thought. They had several moments of romantic awkwardness that should have clued you in: Mori politely not turning around when Thaniel gets undressed when they first meet; Thaniel being bashful when Mori is in the tub and determinedly ensuring he could only see him from the shoulders up (suggesting that he's thinks about seeing him nude from the shoulders down, frankly); the way he takes Mori's hands after the boy injures him with the sword, and how Mori reacts to that gesture, as if things could have gone a different way starting from that point; the way Thaniel protects Mori so fiercely, which is sweet and kind of funny when you realize that Mori is clearly the most dangerous man in the world. But the first major clue is very early on, when Thaniel looks through Mori's book and translates it. In the book, Mori calls Thaniel 'Thaniel'. Mori told us from the start that he isn't comfortable using first names outside of very intimate relationships (only marriage). Once we learn that he writes things down from the vantage point of the future, it seemed like a pretty blatant hint that Mori would come to see Thaniel as his spouse in some variation on the future. And his changing accent? His accent was northern when his future was with Thaniel. Mori is also horrified when Grace takes care of her lab, and then the dining room, before considering where Thaniel's piano is going to go. I could only see that scene as Mori saying, 'You won't love him the way I love him.' It's all in there, it's just outside of the dialogue. I think it was beautifully handled.(less)(hide spoiler)]
This question contains spoilers…(view spoiler)[i don't get the ending. So Mori deliberately sabotaged the train to delay &/or kill Matsumoto? But he failed. What was the point of that? Matsumoto takes Grace away; wasn't that what Mori wanted? Very confusing.
and the author lost me with the chase through the train tunnels. it seemed like she was trying to just END IT and threw everything together all at once, after the first 2/3 of the book was SO SLOOOOOW. (hide spoiler)]
Lindsay
This answer contains spoilers…(view spoiler)[ No, Mori clearly sabotaged the train so that Matsumoto would see the news and return for Grace, thus giving her the happy ending that had always been…more No, Mori clearly sabotaged the train so that Matsumoto would see the news and return for Grace, thus giving her the happy ending that had always been correct for her.
And the business in the train tunnels was meant to be illogical and confusing - if it had been any other way Mori would have been able to predict Grace's actions and stop her. I have to disagree with you, the final third of the book moved much faster than the rest of the book. Breakneck speed in my opinion!(less)(hide spoiler)]
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Rating details

This is a tale that unfolds with the ticking precision of a fine timepiece. It doesn't hurry and it doesn't compromise. It definitely conveyed to me a feeling of a different time and a slightly different world.
The hardback itself is a lovely creation, with a keyhole cover, and a lovely font used throughout. The cover feels like suede. I mention this because it harmonizes so well with the atmosphere of the book. It feels as if I've picked up a book from another time and place.
In a sense, it could
..more
Generally speaking, I’m fully on board with genre-defying/genre-bending works. Is this historical fiction? Steampunk? Mystery? Alternate history? Romance? Yes, sort of, a little, kind of, and yeah, sure. ('It's a taste treat! It's a laxative! Stop--you're BOTH right!')
Where I tend to start losing the thread and incur cramping of the cerebellum (which is only slightly less painful than a calf cramp in the middle of the night) is when time travel gets involved. Now, there’s not time travel going o
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Apr 08, 2015Blake Fraina rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
All right, all you Sherlock Holmes fangirls, listen up.
What would you think of a version where “Sherlock” is a petite clairvoyant Japanese samurai/watchmaker with a Lincolnshire accent? And what if his “Watson” is a twenty-five year old Whitehall telegraph clerk who gave up his musical aspirations due to an acute case of synesthesia? And “Mary Watson” is an Oxford educated scientist with a butch haircut, a penchant for dressing in menswear and a Japanese dandy for a best friend? Think you might
..more
Sep 03, 2015Darth J rated it did not like it
Shelves: could-not-finish, disappointing, amazing-artwork, pretentious, slow
DNF @ page 42
What’s Morse Code for “Boring”?
With its interesting premise and V.C. Andrewslike hole-in-the-cover gimmick, I thought I would be really into this book. Spoiler Alert: I wasn’t.
I searched for a plot between the pretentious overdescriptive details of random objects, but sadly there still didn’t seem to be anything actually going on. At 40 pages in, you’d expect to at least be able to remember characters but I couldn’t honestly tell you who they were or why they were there as this was
..more
May 13, 2015Maxwell rated it it was ok · review of another edition
I received this advanced reading copy from the publisher with no requirement of review. All opinions and thoughts are my own.
2.5 stars
I think this book has so much potential. It follows Nathaniel ('Thaniel') Steepleton who works in the Home Office in London after he mysteriously receives a pocket watch that ends up saving his life. He meets the watchmaker, Mori, as well as precocious, intellectual woman named Grace, and all of their stories come together to *sort of* solve a mystery.
I say 'sort
..more
Sep 10, 2015Hannah Greendale rated it did not like it
Shelves: historical-fiction, literary, fantasy, dnf
I pity every booklover who unwittingly falls for the beautiful cover art and enticing story description as I did. The story is written in such a convoluted, amateur fashion, it requires significant work to stay invested while reading. Further, the story itself is incredibly dull and boring; in fact, the book seems void of any plot whatsoever.
I tried to plod through the book, eventually resorting to reading one chapter a day, then one chapter a week, but it was a grueling business. Often, I fini
..more
This one started so slowly I really was not sure where it was leading. I quickly became attached to Thaniel who obviously had hidden depths. I loved Mori who also had to be so much more than he appeared.
Then the story progressed and the author seemed to gather confidence and it all became very enjoyable, but mostly by the reader who enjoys magic and /or steampunk in their books. I like both so I knew I was in for a good time!
Just occasionally the author rambled a bit but all things eventually ca
..more
Apr 23, 2015Wart Hill rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Things I Find While Shelving
I received a free ARC via NetGalley
ARC Review: The Watchmaker of Filigree Street by Natasha Pulley
I did not enter this book expecting a gorgeous love story.
But I got one.
And damn is it good.
Thaniel works as a telegraphist in the Home Office and there've been a series of threats made by Irish nationalists - bomb threats. One night, Thaniel finds a strange watch has been left in his home. A watch that he cannot get to open. Then it opens by itself one day, and that day
..more
May 25, 2015Donna rated it it was ok
This book was written by a first time author which I was excited about. I usually enjoy reading books by newcomers because I feel as if I'm discovering them, myself, and can tell everyone about them. Their debut novels are often special enough for them to fight to get them published without a proven track record. And this book looked as if it would meet my expectations with its beautiful three dimensional cover and its intriguing premise.
The story takes place in Victorian England where Thaniel,
..more
Apr 30, 2015Meep rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Shelves: favourite, cosy-mystery-crime-detective, fantasy-paranormal-shifter, have-audio
Absolutely loved this book.
An intricate maze of clockwork that spirals out with easy charm until you see the greater picture.
Characters are complex, charming yet flawed. And there's a clockwork octopus! (that might have been what convinced me to buy!)
Grace who would be the heroine of another book, so clever, held back by her gender, yet she has a Sherlockian disregard of people and lacks romance in her mathamatical soul.
Matsumoto, sharp beneath his pretty veneer.
Quiet Mori; gentle charm, coils,
..more
May 29, 2015Ivonne Rovira rated it it was amazing
Recommended to Ivonne by: NetGalley
In mid-1880s London, both Nathaniel “Thaniel” Steepleton, a 25-year-old lowly clerk and telegraphist first at the Home Office and then at the Foreign Office, and Grace Carrow, opinionated Oxford-trained physicist and daughter of old-fashioned Lord Carrow, both end up with a marvel of a timepiece. Both of these watches were lovingly crafted by a most unusual watchmaker, Keita Mori, related to a Samurai lord and a former assistant to the interior minister of Japan. These days Mori creates the fine..more
Jun 16, 2016Helle rated it really liked it
Shelves: no-1-ladies-reading-group, magical-realism
A whimsical, difficult-to-classify, atmospheric, speculative novel of the kind I haven’t read in years but which I was ultimately (surprisingly) pleased was suggested in one of my reading groups. I felt a slight whiff of The Night Circus, a tiny hint of steampunk and the suggestion of inspiration from Philip Pullman. And yet the novel is entirely original.
The setting: Victorian London, and Japan.
The characters: a young telegrapher called Thaniel, a Japanese watchmaker called Mori, a young Oxfor
..more
Jul 20, 2019Elise (TheBookishActress) rated it really liked it
Shelves: books-read-2019, that-rep-of-characters-of-color, this-aestheticy-setting, favorite-characters, books-released-2000-2015, what-kind-of-callout, 4-star, genre-histfic-past, that-lgbtq-rep-tho, elise-underrated-list
This is a strange and very wonderful book about making clocks, the future, and also love in the 1850s.
The Watchmaker of Filigree Street follows Thaniel, a local clerk who finds a watch on his person. When this watch alerts him of a bomb about to go off, his suspicions lead him to Mori, a Japanese clockmaker who is strangely kind to him.
Pretty cool setup, right? We don’t get a strong sense of Thaniel right off the bat; Mori, meanwhile, comes off as ambiguous but always strangely likeable. There
..more
Apr 10, 2018Katie Lumsden rated it it was amazing
Quite possibly my favourite book of the year so far. Brilliant writing, wonderful characterisation, great themes, a perfect balance of realism and a touch of magic, and a healthy mix of Victorian London and 19th century Japan.
Mar 17, 2019Dannii Elle

The Maker Of Filigree Streets

rated it really liked it

The Maker Of Filigree Street Lyrics

· review of another edition
Shelves: historical-highness, magical-realism-mastery, science-fiction-sagacity
This book was a total cover boy, a few years ago, and then I added it to my shelves and never felt the urge to pick it up again. A recent purge of my shelves had me re-evaluating many of the titles there, however, and finally hastened me to give this a read. I am SO glad I did!
I had assumed this to be a straight-forward historical mystery but was pleasantly surprised to also find this a whimsical cross-cultural tale with a hefty dose of magical realism and murky steampunk tones, throughout.
This
..more
Jun 28, 2018Jacob Overmark rated it liked it
Tic toc, tic toc …
A lot of mechanic refinery and Japanese culture mixed up with politics and a bachelor clerk.
I almost like the idea of strings of coincidences leading to a certain reaction, whether it be a bomb blast or the meeting of strangers.
Well written and the storyline is following its own strange logic – that is when you are able to jump to conclusions which will depend on not too frequent change of minds by the personae.
But … having a hyper sensitive Japanese clockmaker run the drama b
..more
This was described to me as a wittier and twistier Sherlock Holmes (with a samurai! With that awesome cover! When will I ever learn that the old adage about not judging a book actually means something?), and I'm disappointed to say that it didn't live up to its potential at all. It was confusing, disjointed, the dialogue felt clunky and awkward, and I felt that the characters deserved a better story.
But at least the clockwork octopus was amazing. Fuller review to come eventually.
I was intrigued by the title; I was intrigued by the synopsis;I was smitten with the design of the whole thing.
Could a debut novel live up to all of that?
Yes, it could!
The story opens in London, and in a world that mixes the real and the fantastical in the loveliest of ways.
Nathaniel Steepleton – Thaniel – was a young telegraph operator at the Home Office. His life was a dull routine; he had wanted to be a pianist, but he took job so that he could help to support his widowed sister and her young
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Aug 26, 2016K.J. Charles added it
Mph. This was well written and I was really enjoying it. Lovely sense of time, stroppy unlikeable heroine, interesting steampunky 'science' without too much annoying airship bobbins and a great concept. But I do wish there had been a proper plot--it just kind of evaporated towards the end, leaving me with a sense that there's less to this than meets the eye.
Also, there are multiple problematic issues with the Japanese elements (and also just stupid ones. A sequence where someone who doesn't spe
..more
Oct 21, 2016Maria Hill AKA MH Books rated it really liked it

The Watchmaker Of Filigree Street

Shelves: england, asia, female-authors, audible, japan, 19th-century, fantasy, supernatural, magical-realism
There were problems with the plot in places, I think it suffered from “too many cooks/authors” syndrome, in that the author may have taken too much advice from too many people and that it shows? I don’t know why I think this, it’s just an impression I have.
However most importantly this is a rollicking good story! I enjoyed it immensely, an almost magical clockwork pet octopus, foreseeing the probable future, clockwork bombs, is he a villain or a hero and if so can we be friends or more than frie
..more
Nov 06, 2015Mary Robinette Kowal rated it it was amazing
It is 4:45am and I have just finished this astonishingly good novel. I knew nothing about it other than that it had a lovely cover, and that the first page was beautifully written. It's historical fantasy, set in London and Japan. The language is vivid and compelling. The characters are achingly real. I could tell you about the plot, but I think you will like it best if you discover it yourself.
Just make sure you have plenty of spare time, because it is very hard to put down.
Jan 22, 2018Krystal rated it really liked it
Shelves: owned, historical-fiction, general-fiction, literary-fiction
Okay, just give me a minute to get my thoughts in order. What a whirlwind ending!
Can I start by talking about the cover? Covers so rarely rate with me but this one is simply stunning. I'll admit - it's the sole reason I picked this book up in the first place. Beautiful design.
So.
It's a bit of a random story but I really enjoyed it! There's this fellow, Thaniel, who is stuck in a bit of a dead end job. He's a nice enough guy but is very routine and the highlight of his life is drinking tea. Then
..more
Thaniel Steepleton is an unassuming British public servant. Once, he had dreams of becoming a pianist, but now he has to support his distant, widowed sister's family, so he's tied to his job as a telegraph operator, and doesn't expect anything in his rather dull and ascetic life to change.
However, an anonymous gift of a clearly valuable watch becomes suspicious when it ends up saving him from an Irish terrorist group's bomb. Soon, he's assigned to spy on Keita Mori, a Japanese watchmaker living
..more
Every now and again a book turns up that appears to be everywhere in Goodreads and the blog world. In the past month or so, this was one such book. When I saw it come up on a special offer I thought sure lets give it a go.
Honestly I have no idea why this book has been so popular recently or is getting rated so highly. It started off interesting enough, though honestly from the beginning I never felt hooked. It went down hill from there. My impressions was the author had a somewhat good idea but
..more
Sep 01, 2015Olga Godim rated it really liked it
4.5 stars
It is hard to pigeonhole this book. Literary? I’m not sure. Historical? Kind-of. It does deal with a historical period. Steampunk? Not really, even though the characters have some paranormal abilities, and the Victorian era adds credibility to such a label. The closest I can come up with is magic realism.
Magic shimmers on the pages of this book. It defines the story and the protagonists. And the attraction of this book for me was definitely magical, as I don’t usually like literary or
..more
Jul 19, 2016Veronique rated it really liked it · review of another edition
London mid 1880s, clockwork automata, possible clairvoyance and Japanese culture - what’s not to love? Pulley’s debut uses the typical elements of steampunk mixed with original aspects in an entertaining tale.
The narration although slow at the beginning grabbed me due to the characters, which the author made complex and intriguing. We’re at first introduced to Thaniel Steepleton, bored synesthete (sounds are colours to him) telegraphist at the Home Office, who one day finds an intricate clock de
..more
Jul 23, 2018Anthony rated it really liked it · review of another edition
There were times when the writing felt perhaps a bit too subtle and elusive for all of the beats of the story to really land, but in the end there were surprising emotional moments and interesting twists that grounded it for me and ticked up my rating a notch. Definitely original and fascinating stuff in this book.
Oct 25, 2016Jacoline Maes rated it did not like it · review of another edition
It’s a shame that such an interesting concept is reduced to a story that’s just boring. There’s a mechanic octopus walking around and I don’t even care.
Aug 18, 2017Sarah rated it really liked it
My initial reaction was: not a lot happened until the end, but I was okay with it because the ending was sort of spectacular and also ambiguous and I still haven't drawn any firm conclusions.
But then I thought about it and, actually.. Quite a bit did happen in the beginning. A lot of it was lost/forgotten in the larger mystery of things.
First, the characters: Nathaniel ('Thaniel) Steepleton is a telegraphist and pianist working for the Home Office in Victorian London.
Grace Carrow is a woman wh
..more
Jul 23, 2015Beadyjan rated it it was amazing
I want a clockwork octopus! Now that's not a phrase I ever thought I'd hear myself utter but I fell head over heels for Katsu the clockwork octopus in this beguiling and totally charming story.
My beautiful hardback copy of this book was a prize I won in a blog competition. I sort of had mixed feelings about it before I read it, especially when a couple of reviews describe it as steampunk - me and steampunk haven't got a very good history so far. However I wouldn't really categorise this as steam
..more
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Natasha Pulley is a British author, best known for her debut novel, The Watchmaker of Filigree Street, which won a Betty Trask Award.

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