The Clockwork Three

The Clockwork Three.
Author Matthew J. Kirby
Cover artist Brian Despain
Country United States
Language English
Genre Historical fiction
Children's fiction
Publisher Scholastic
Publication date
October 1, 2010[1]
Media type Print (hardcover) and Audiobook
Pages 400[2]
ISBN 0-545-20337-6

The Clockwork Three is a 2010 novel by American author Matthew J. Kirby. Set in a fictional coastal city in the late nineteenth century, it follows three children: Giuseppe, Hannah, and Frederick who work to solve each other's problems.

Origins

The idea for The Clockwork Three came to Kirby when he read a story of a boy named Joseph in a newspaper from 1873.[3] Joseph had been kidnapped from Italy and had to play a fiddle in English streets to earn money for his master, until he eventually escaped.[3]

Plot

Giuseppe finds a green violin floating in the harbor and he tries it out. He finds that it gives a very beautiful sound, and he is thrown money from people everywhere in the streets. He gets an idea to use his green violin to get a boat ticket back to Italy where he had been taken from. For once, Giuseppe has hope in getting back to his family. Frederick is going around in search of a chest plate for his clockwork man. While wandering the streets, Frederick catches a glimpse of Mrs. Treeless, the woman in charge of an orphanage Frederick had been in before becoming apprenticed to Master Branch, which reminds him of the awful memories he had at the orphanage. He also bumps into Giuseppe, but Giuseppe runs along with his violin. Later, he finds a coal chute, perfect for the chest plate, and sneaks it out of a coal yard. While he sneaks out, he lies about his father being O'Malley. He goes back to Master Branch's shop, where Frederick is an apprentice, and once he decides that Master Branch is asleep, he goes to the basement of the shop to work on his clockwork man. Hannah discovers that a man named Mister Stroop supposedly left the treasure in the suites at the top of the hotel. She later sees a map that hints it may be near a pond in the park. She runs to look for it when she desperately needs money for her sick father's medicine. There she meets Giuseppe, and the two look for the treasure but it is not there, though she receives some herbal medicine from a woman who lives in the park. Hannah's father draws for her where the treasure is hidden in the hotel, having worked for Stroop's hotel in the past.

The next day the three children all meet for the first time and Frederick shows the other two his automaton. The three agree to help each other out with their problems. Giuseppe mentions that he saw a clockwork head—Frederick's only missing piece—in a museum. The three sneak into the museum so Frederick can inspect the head, but they are interrupted by guards and forced to flee. Frederick escapes with the stolen head, which was made by Albertus Magnus. Hannah also accidentally took a small piece of clay belonging to a golem, and inserts it into the Clockwork Man thus bringing the Clockwork Man alive. This, coupled with the Magnus head, gives it near-human intelligence.

Hannah discovers that Mister Stroop's treasure is actually his will, witnessed by the hotel's owner, Mister Twine. She and Frederick talk to him, but Hannah refuses to take the money because it would cause the park to be destroyed. Mister Twine promotes her to the chief of maids, and gives her quite a bit of money for new dresses, a portion of which she gives to Giuseppe for his ticket. A law was passed that the padrones no longer had legal control over their buskers. Enraged, Stefano tries to kill Giuseppe, but he is saved by Yakov, who shoots Stephano in the head with his gun. Madame Pomeroy asks Giuseppe to travel with her to play his green violin for kings and queens. Frederick eventually becomes a journeyman, and Hannah's father's health improves. The story ends with an epilogue in which Frederick has created a clockwork bird and shows it to Hannah. It begins to hum a tune that Giuseppe played on his violin and Hannah's father's toes begin to tap, showing that his leg still works.

Characters

Critical reception

Publishers Weekly gave The Clockwork Three a starred review, saying "debut novelist Kirby has assembled all the ingredients for a rousing adventure, which he delivers with rich, transporting prose."[4] The website Kidsreads also gave the book a positive review, saying "With plenty of steampunk elements and more than a few hints of violence, The Clockwork Three is, in many ways, as dark and menacing as its hard-edged setting."[5] Another review came from Deseret News, praising the imagery.[6] Kirkus Reviews was more mixed, calling it "an interesting concept" but thought the ending was too obvious and the children became less interesting as the story went along.[7]

References

  1. Kirby, Matthew J. (January 25, 2010). "Release Date". Kirbside, Matthew J. Kirby's blog. Retrieved November 11, 2010.
  2. "Amazon.com:The Clockwork Three". Amazon.com. Retrieved November 12, 2010.
  3. 1 2 Piehl, Norah (October 2010). "Interview with Matthew J. Kirby". Kidsreads.com. Retrieved November 7, 2010.
  4. "The Clockwork Three Review". Publishers Weekly. October 2010. Retrieved November 11, 2010.
  5. Piehl, Norah. "Review: The Clockwork Three". Kidsreads.com. Retrieved November 11, 2010.
  6. Harrison, Jessica (September 25, 2010). "Imaginative 'Clockwork Three' has a classic feel". Deseret News. Retrieved November 11, 2010.
  7. "The Clockwork Three review". Kirkus Reviews. September 10, 2010. Retrieved January 16, 2011.
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