The Alchemy of Stone
The Alchemy of Stone is a Steampunk fantasy novel by Ekaterina Sedia. It tells the story of Mattie, a clockwork Robot Girl who must save an ancient Dying Race, navigate deadly political intrigue, and resolve an abusive relationship with her creator, all in a city ruled by borderline-Mad Scientist Steampunk Engineers in an uneasy truce with a competing faction of Alchemists.
Despite the fantasy setting and the non-human protagonist, the work is really a tragic exploration of abuse, isolation, human interdependence, and the desire for freedom.
Tropes used in The Alchemy of Stone include:
- Abusive Parents: Mattie's creator, Loharri.
- Alchemy: Obviously. However, in this work, alchemy is essentially magic, and is the force opposed to the scientific-minded Mechanics.
- Blue Blood: The Duke and his court.
- Clock Punk
- Deus Angst Machina: Averted. Well, the main character is a machine, and she does angst, and supernatural powers certainly are involved...
- But generally, though she does have to face a lot of problems, everything that happens to her is consistent and makes sense within the story.
- Does This Remind You of Anything?: Mattie and her key.
- Eventually made quite explicit.
- Dying Race
- Eye of Newt: Found in Mattie's lab, and useful for Alchemy in general. Well, eye of sheep, actually...
- Eye Scream: With Mattie's mechanical eyes.
- Fantastic Racism: Though fairly close to Real Life in some cases.
- FemBot: Mattie is somewhere between this and Robot Girl.
- Freud Was Right: Mattie and her key.
- Freudian Excuse: Loharri's upbringing.
- Functional Magic: Alchemy works this way.
- Gotterdammerung
- Healing Potion: Mattie can make these, amongst other things.
- Hive Mind: The gargoyles.
- Humans Through Alien Eyes: Though she is quite human in many ways, Mattie definitely has her own way of seeing the world. The Gargoyles provide an even more alien perspective.
- Just a Machine: Mattie is obviously as intelligent as any human, and is a person; but even though she is legally recognized as one (to some extent), few really respect her autonomy in practice. Even what few friends she has often act surprised to see her exhibit human emotions, and occasionally treat her with little respect.
- Ludd Was Right: The work as a whole doesn't really have this moral (the protagonist is a machine, after all) but it does have some overtones of this. The Mechanics certainly don't make the city a nicer place to live. Some of their opponents who are hurt most by their policies pretty much become straight Luddites.
- Mad Scientist: The Mechanics.
- Also Emperor Scientists.
- Magic Versus Science: The city is ruled by a guild of mechanics and a guild of alchemists (read: witches), with the two in constant conflict. Mattie gets caught in the middle as a robot who has learned to do alchemical magic.
- Master Computer: The Mechanics build a Steampunk version of this.
- Mind Rape: Loharri built Mattie's mind, and he doesn't tell her everything about what he put in it for his own ends...
- Our Homunculi Are Different
- Our Souls Are Different
- Pinball Protagonist: For much of the novel, Mattie gets swept along by the events and other characters around her. Her seeming inability to influence the world around her, or to be seen as having an agency of her own, are major parts of the story.
- Punk Punk
- Rape Is Love: Mattie and her key and Loharri -- done in a symbolic way, and used to illustrate how abusive Loharri is.
- The Revolution Will Not Be Civilized
- Ridiculously-Human Robots: Justified (well, apart from the whole "ridiculously human clockwork robot" thing). Loharri made Mattie very human because he wanted a companion, and not a mere tool or servant. The vast majority of other robots in the setting were not made for such a purpose, and are just mindless machines.
- Robosexual: Played with in a symbolic way. Mattie is not physically capable of having sex, but other aspects of her mechanism take on sexual meanings for her.
- She also feels "naked" when her face-mask is removed, exposing her innermost mechanisms.
- Robot Girl: With some FemBot mixed in.
- Sinister Surveillance: Used on a very personal level at one point.
- Spider Tank: A Steampunk version makes an appearance.
- Steampunk
- What Measure Is a Non-Human?
- Your Soul Is Mine: Subverted. The Soul Smoker is very much a sympathetic character.
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