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Mechanique: A Tale of the Circus Tresaulti
Mechanique: A Tale of the Circus Tresaulti
Mechanique: A Tale of the Circus Tresaulti
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Mechanique: A Tale of the Circus Tresaulti

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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Come inside and take a seat; the show is about to begin . . .

Outside any city still standing, the Mechanical Circus Tresaulti sets up its tents. Crowds pack the benches to gawk at the brass-and-copper troupe and their impossible feats: Ayar the Strong Man, the acrobatic Grimaldi Brothers, fearless Elena and her aerialists who perform on living trapezes. War is everywhere, but while the Circus is performing, the world is magic.

That magic is no accident: Boss builds her circus from the bones out, molding a mechanical company that will survive the unforgiving landscape.

But even a careful ringmaster can make mistakes.

Two of Tresaulti’s performers are trapped in a secret standoff that threatens to tear the Circus apart, just as the war lands on their doorstep. Now they must fight a war on two fronts: one from the outside, and a more dangerous one from within . . .
LanguageEnglish
PublisherPrime Books
Release dateApr 25, 2011
ISBN9781607012962
Mechanique: A Tale of the Circus Tresaulti
Author

Genevieve Valentine

Genevieve Valentine is the author of Persona and of the critically acclaimed novel Mechanique: A Tale of the Circus Tresaulti, which won the Crawford Award for Best novel, as well as a nomination for the Nebula Award and the Romantic Times Best Fantasy of the Year. Her short fiction has been nominated for a World Fantasy Award and the Shirley Jackson Award. She lives in New York City. Visit her at GenevieveValentine.com.

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Reviews for Mechanique

Rating: 3.8345324374100715 out of 5 stars
4/5

139 ratings24 reviews

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This had a lot of potential, I think. The plot is sufficiently engaging but nothing happens until further into the book. It turns into some sort of rescue novel at the end, where the first part of it is mostly discussing circus life and Alec.

    For one thing, I didn't enjoy the point of view. It's very distant, so you never get a feel for the characters. It's like you're watching them from a neutral party and a lot of the time the characters come off as emotionless, or even if they don't, I still didn't feel connected. It just wasn't handled in a way that I find particularly good.

    I don't think I'm going to comment on the steampunk aspect. It was different.

    thanks to netgalley for a copy!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I don't think I've ever read anything quite like this book. I was entranced by the prose and the language and the descriptive passages, and by the interesting way she unfolds the narrative--while there is a narrative arc and a shape to the book, it's not strictly linear or chronological. There's something about the interrupted prose, the asides and the jumps in POV to provide character sidenotes that reminds me of Michael Ondaatje's The Collected Works of Billy the Kid, which is an entirely different sort of book that is more poetry than prose, but I think in that small way it shares a sensibility. (Also, it is one of my favourite books, so any comparison is overwhelmingly positive.) Though in terms of genre this book is certainly both post-apocalyptic and steampunk, it also isn't limited by those descriptions and in many ways stretches our ideas of those genre. Really, I was just enthralled by all of it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Brilliant THE MECHANICAL CIRCUS TRESAULTIFINEST SPECTACTLE ANYWHEREMECHANICAL MEN beyond IMAGINATIONAstounding feats of ACROBATICSThe Finest HUMAN CURIOSITIESThe World has ever SEENSTRONGMEN, DANCING GIRLS& LIVING ENGINESFLYING GIRLS, LIGHTER than AIRMUSIC from the HUMAN ORCHESTRABARGAIN ENTERTAINMENT for ONE and ALLOur story opens with a second person introduction of you visiting the circus and continues with several changes of POV and tense which could be jarring but is very much at the service of the story and the beautifully drawn world building. This is an achingly good story, told with an expert voice. We follow several characters and grow to live and love with the circus which is like a large dysfunctional family. This is a steampunkeqsque world, set post collapse, where the circus travels the country but tries never to revisit places, or at least not within living memory. As we progress with the circus we are embroiled in the petty politics of the performers and gradually learn more about the world, getting back stories of the performers. I read this is in one sitting, picking it up in the morning and not able to put it down until it was finished, and what a read it was! Highly recommended.Some parts of the past cannot be reclaimed, he knows. Better not to raise ghosts.Overall – Beautiful, painful, joyous, adventurous tapestry to be savoured and devoured and thrust into the hands of all those who share your reading tastes…
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Wouldya look at that, I finally finished reading this? I'm not entirely sure why I stopped: it's not a hard read, and the short chapters pull you on through the story pretty well. There's some gorgeous writing, and the whole structure of it -- the mix of POVs, tenses, etc -- makes it pretty absorbing as you try to figure out all the whys and wherefores. Some of the imagery is just... disgusting, visceral, beautiful, all at once.The characters are not exactly likeable, but fascinating: Elena, who you slowly come to understand; Bird and Stenos, with their yearnings; Boss, with her strange abilities...All in all, it's an interesting read, and it'll stick in my mind, but not a favourite, I think.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Dark and tense and powerful. One of very few contemporary novels that didn't have any missteps for me. Every plot point and characterization felt inevitable and right.

    The writing is gorgeous--lyrical and dramatic without being overwrought. Every so often there is a phrase that makes you feel like you've just been punched...in a good way. The characters are compelling, tough, and vividly drawn.

    If you think you might like this, you probably will. But I'd also recommend this to people who aren't particularly interested in steampunk, or fantasy, or circuses, or post-apocalyptic fiction, so long as you really like elegant prose and are willing to try something different.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Deeper than expected.. still doesn't beat out Something Wicked or Night Circus (who knew I'd like so much circus fiction? {I dislike clowns... very much.})
    I want to watch Carnevale again.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    There were things I liked about this book... and there were things that annoyed me about this book.
    I felt as if any Readers Advisory Service out there would say? What? You loved China Mieville's 'The Scar?' and you loved Erin Morgenstern's "The Night Circus?" Well then, HAVE I GOT A BOOK FOR YOU! And I have to say... "but...no."
    This book does indeed have many of the elements that I've loved from both of those books. Grotesquely mechanically enhanced people. A circus with performers who do not die. A land torn by conflict. Lots of ambiguity, lots of metaphor.
    But somehow, it just didn't come together for me, emotionally or intellectually, like the other two books. (This book was actually published slightly before The Night Circus, the authors were probably working on the books at the same time, so I do not actually think one imitated another; they just happen to have many of the same elements and themes.)
    I've spent some time now thinking about why it didn't wholly come together for me.
    Part of it was aesthetic. I really did not like how the author keeps taking time out to refer to the reader as "you." I felt like it was a device intended to lure me into the story; which had the opposite effect, and pushed me out of the story... with feelings of aggravation.
    The other thing was that: Mechanical enhancements are usually about ingenuity, technology, the uses and misuses of physical ability. Here, they are not. The enhancements/mutilations as they function in this story, are fully and completely magical. There is no reason, plotwise, for them to be mechanical; they don't actually function as if they are mechanical.
    I also was just not drawn in by the love/hate conflict over "who gets the wings." I didn't feel it. Many of the characters were too vaguely drawn. (For example: we know Elena is a cruel bitch, because we are told how mean she is ad infinitum. But I did not once notice, or feel, her being particularly cruel.) I wanted to know the characters as people; to know what drove them to their extreme decisions. Instead they felt like stock characters in fairy tales. The time and place are ambiguous - and I liked that - but I felt like it needed some sharply human figures to anchor it.
    On the other hand, there were things about the book I liked very much. I thought that the war-torn land, in near-eternal conflict, with the circus endlessly making its circuit, worked very well. I ended up really liking the Boss - and the thwarted feelings of her musician for her were understated and effective. Nice themes of dependency, independence, sacrifice, oppression, responsibility, loyalty. And the final conflict, where it comes down to a choice between letting herself and those who personally depend on her die... or potentially destroying all of her larger dreams - it's horribly effective.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Another day, another YA dystopian piece of crap trying to be vogue. I didn't find it poetic, I found it frustratingly badly written in a voice that seemed skitzophrenic at best. A hint at mystery from a Government Man (capital letters so you know he means business) and an obvious collection of circus "freaks" with some steampunk bits glued to them. Possibly an interesting premise but with writing and a POV like that, who can really tell.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Plot: 3 1/2stars
    Characters: 3 1/2 stars
    Style: 5 stars
    Pace: 3 stars

    Such a strange novel. It's disjointed, with a plethora of POVs- first present tense, third past tense, even second future tense at points. But despite that, it adds up and becomes evocative, absorbing.

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Just finished "Mechanique: A Tale of the Circus Tressaulti by Genevieve Valentine and loved it. As a kid in school I hated it when I read a good book with a great story and then the teacher ruined it by saying this man represents the king and these people societies restraints and Blah Blah Blah. How many authors write books as propaganda? I'm sure some do, but I like a story like those old sermons that teach without smacking you across the face with a dead fish. This is the only book I can remember reading and wondering if there were allegories, what did the circus represent, and why copper........ I still don't want anyone to spell it out for me and tell me there is only one meaning to the book and I darn well better knuckle under and accept that. I'll ponder the book for awhile and decide for myself, thank you.Interesting story. Lot's great characters and things to think about. That's the highest praise I have for a book.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I really do have a soft spot for circuses. Something about the images of fantasy and impossible stunts coming to life, the anticipation and excitement of an outing, aerial feats, show of strength, the whole shebang. Beautiful.

    I loved this book with its eclectic motley of circus, both those who are metal and those who still have flesh, blood, and bone.

    Many times I found the point of view and construction extremely clunky. The excessive usage of second person and parenthesis is unwieldy. You don't always know who is talking (or the importance of what is between these two brackets). Most of the time it wasn't a problem, just when the chapters were too short and the plot keeps bouncing around. I liked that sort of usage in the beginning and the end of the book, it was just the middle.

    Honestly, the middle was the weakest part. I fell I'm love in the first 30 pages, but then things got a little tedious, and the end was good, but not great. And if you really think about it, this book had very little plot. That's why it got a tedious at some points.

    The beginning and the premise of this book is just beautiful. Dangerous, but beautiful. I love the idea of a mechanical spine, hollow bones, clockwork lungs, and wings that chime out a chord when the copper feathers brush against each other. And each of the character with their own reasons and motives for lying under Boss's hands. I rather loved the characters, but wished Valentine gave us a little more. As the book went on, I found myself nodding with understatement whenever Elena, the cruel one, spoke. But there just wasn't enough. The love hate between Bird and Steson was not explained as well it should have been. I am not against the reader finding it out slowly by their own conclusions, but the strange motivations were just not explained clearly enough.

    Similarly, I did not like the explanation behind Boss's gift. It was a little too mundane, not enough explained. The ending was abrupt and the transition of ringmasters was not explained thoroughly enough. And don't tell me it's meant to be mysterious because it was more confusing than mysterious.

    All in all, a most beautiful book that I would read again. There were many moments that I've found myself forgetting that I was in my own room because I was seeing brass legs and flying acrobats dancing to the tempo of a majestic waltz.
    3.5 beautiful stars rounded down because of construction issues.
    Recommended for those who love a bit of fantasy and have a soft spot for circuses.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A steampunk fantasy about a circus which travels across a post-apocalyptic landscape plagued by war and political instability.It is easy to describe Mechanique is about: the circus and its secrets, about how various characters came to join it and how they work together, about happens when things go wrong. But that doesn't capture what it is like.Mechanique can be dark and unsettling and cold. The mechanical alterations the Boss makes to people - alterations which save them, yet come at a cost - are eerie. The people who join the circus often do so in desperation, because they don't have many other options. The circus offers the security of a home and a job - yet it's a precarious just-scrapping-by and accepting-there-are-risks sort of security. There's warmth and camaraderie, but there's also grief and bitterness. And it's obvious, from the very beginning, that things go wrong.The story holds the reader at a distance: because there are so many characters and it is impossible to get to know all of them; because much of the story is told from Little George's perspective, and he is often an observer who doesn't understand the circus he has grown up with (to be fair, George is also a happy, hopeful filter to watch the circus through). A powerful, evocative story. I admired it more than I enjoyed it, but I think I'm glad I read it. Boss always tells the rubes that her late husband made us all. "Oh lord," she says when they wonder about our mechanicals. She lifts her hands and trills. "I can barely oil the things, let alone!"She doesn't say what she lets alone, and no one asks. [...] I think she says it so they get the feeling we could break at any moment. It's always more exciting to watch something you know could backfire. [...] (I didn't understand her. I had been with the circus too long: I felt too safe to know why it was better to make some thing seem breakable and frail. I didn't know how might come looking for us. If they thought we were strong enough to take hold.)

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Picked this up after reading Valentine's amazing short story in After. Wasn't sure how much I'd like it, but the imagery is amazing. Stayed up til 1:30 am reading it. I like that the circus performers are definitely not all white.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Post-apocalyptic/fantasy/steampunk, beautifully written, told in part as a series of vignettes.

    Captivating, until the last third or so, when I became uncaptivated and dragged my heels finishing it - I think because the characters were vignette or short-story size and most stopped changing or surprising me by the halfway mark.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Mechanique is full of beautiful imagery and tragic characters, set in a world that has, as King put so aptly, moved on. It's magical realism with a steampunk aesthetic, sort of, and the combination is vivid.

    It doesn't quite sit easily with me, though - I was a little disappointed when it became clear that this is more fantasy than soft sci-fi. Maybe it's more literary than anything - which, for me, is usually a condemnation, one I'm not sure Mechanique quite deserves - but it just doesn't totally hang together.

    There are some purely mechanical problems, too (no pun intended.) Point-of-view switches are abrupt and somewhat arbitrary, from second person to first to third, covering perhaps more characters than would have been ideal. And while the superficial plot works fine, the emotional payoff didn't really hit me - I was invested in the wrong characters, maybe.

    All that said, it's lovely and thought-provoking, and I wouldn't disrecommend it, especially if you are into steampunk and tragedy.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is perhaps my first steampunk novel, so it was novel to me. I loved it. I suspect my admiration goes more towards the author than the genre. The writing was top notch, as were the characters and the plot. My only criticism was the end fight scene, but then fight scenes aren't my favorite reads. The conclusion of the novel itself was spot-on. Immensely enjoyable. I don't hand out 5 stars easily, but I enjoyed the read so much, I felt compelled to rate it highly.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I taught a class called Ideas to Outlines, or Outlining for Organics. As part of the process I presented, I tried to cover all the possible starting points for a novel. The hardest for me was a mood story, because I hadn’t actually encountered one with that focus. I’m all about story, and in most modern novels at least, that means plot-focused. Mechanique proved me wrong in the most delightful way. This is not a book for the plot-driven, straight-forward reader, but if you’re willing to lay yourself open to a twisted, tangled journey that often reminded me of an Escher painting, Mechanique will surprise and awe you. This novel does not hold to point of view conventions, uses second person and intrusive narrators at times, gives no warning when thrusting you into past events, and the story unfolds in glimpses, just enough to have you thinking you’ve found the main point only to lose it again. At the same time, there is a clearly defined story. Well, actually several of them. This is not a naval-gazing, stream of consciousness novel. Valentine knows exactly where it’s going and how all the pieces fit together, or at least that’s how it comes across. The characters are compelling, each with their own story and their own reasons behind what they do. The world itself is introduced bit by bit until you get a surreal picture that is so concrete it becomes real. But the strongest part of this novel is the mood. It’s hard to explain because it’s part the world, part the language, part how the story unfolds, and part how everything comes together. I recommend Mechanique wholeheartedly. It’s more than just a read. It’s an experience. I’ve talked about what made Mechanique special, but neglected the basics. It’s a steampunk apocalyptic novel about a traveling circus. However, the feel of the novel is more important than the genre in this case. It’s worth giving a read. I got the title from NetGalley or I might not have come across it, but I’m glad it caught my eye.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Circus Tresaulti, set in the distant future, features an odd assortment of mechanical people. Boss has replaced bones, organs and various bits and pieces of the human body with mechanical and medal parts. This is a very odd book, but I found myself unable to put it down. The people and their lives were fascinating. I do wish the book was a bit more chronological, it skipped all over the place, but at times that did serve the author well. Overall, this is definitely a book worth checking out.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I just finished "Mechanique - A Tale of the Circus Tresaulti" by Genevieve Valentine. I enjoyed this book. It was rather dark and depressing. If you are interested in scientific accuracy, um, this might not be your best bet. As noted in the attached review, sort of a mashup of steampunk romance, fantasy and a bit more. I must admit skimming a bit near the end. Could just be my current mood though.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    This is a weird book. I struggled to finish it, and pushed onward because 1) it was on the Nebula shortlist and 2) simple curiosity about how it would end. I should also add that I have always gotten a weird vibe from circuses, so this wasn't a book I would have selected on my own, despite my interest in steampunk.Oddly enough, I could readily except some of the stranger elements of the circus. The ringmaster, Boss, has a peculiar talent to grab souls on the brink of death and reconstruct them into partly metal bodies. This is never explained or understood by the characters, Boss most of all, and that was fine by me. The weirdness of the creations incorporated well with the vibe of a circus, especially against an already-bleak dystopian backdrop.The thing that ended up jolting me the most was the fluctuating structure of the book itself. There are various story threads going on at once--past and present--told by different characters, in different perspectives, and with omniscient add-ins in parenthesis. The cast of characters is wide and even at the very end, I was confused about who many of the minor characters were. I can't say that the story lacked a logical flow, as the author was obviously very skilled, but at the same time it was an unusual flow and that made it a challenging read.The characters themselves are intriguing and complex. Boss and Elena struck me as especially vivid. Even the darker characters are portrayed well. There's nothing black and white about them, even if they do terrible things.In the end, I would say this is a book for those who like an experimental structure and a creepy vibe. It's not my sort of thing, but I see why it made the Nebula ballot.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I feel that it is very important to point out that this novel is a true work of art. Of course, as with all works of art there will be those who are fascinated by it and others who are dissatisfied with what they find before them. As for me, I’m caught up somewhere in the middle.I could appreciate the novel for the craftsmanship that went into it but at the same time the very original construction didn’t really appeal to me. The narrative jumps around both in point of view and chronologically. I assume that these jumps are marked by chapter breaks in the physical copy of the book but in my PDF-to-mobi copy only a handful of these breaks were marked. Sometimes a paragraph would start in the third person, present tense and suddenly switch to first person, past tense and be following a different plot point. This got to be very confusing at times; I’d be lying if I didn’t say that it affected my enjoyment of the story.The opening scene is about “you” visiting the circus and admiring the marvels that are to be found there. It was so uncannily similar to the opening of The Night Circus that I wasn’t sure what to make of it at first. It turns out that both books are copyrighted to 2011 – in fact, Mechanique was published some 6 months before The Night Circus – so it’s just two different authors who came up with very similar ideas (albeit following completely different plot veins) at around the same time.It took me a while to really get used to the narrator jumps. Sometimes it would be in the second person, sometimes third person omniscient and others in the first person. It took me a fair while to get used to the flow of this. It didn’t help that the plot took a long time in getting anywhere at all: it wasn’t until the 10-15% mark that the threads of a plot started to weave together beyond the confusion of seemingly random, unconnected scenes that had come before then, and it wasn’t until the 50% mark that the plot itself took precedence over anecdotes from various characters’ pasts.That was what I didn’t really like about the book – how things seemed to yo-yo a lot between relevant scenes and what were really just scenes to flesh out the history behind the story. When things focused on the plot, though, I found it to be 100% original and absorbing. I loved the steampunk idea it all of a woman somehow endowed with the ability to sustain a person’s life indefinitely through metal contraptions. I liked the idea of a travelling circus moving through the wasteland of a country brought to its knees by constant wars, unable to pull itself back together. This was a fascinating setting, especially as we have no real idea of when it could possibly be as the chronology even within the story is very vague, or even where, though I pictured it being in North America.I didn’t really buy the hatred behind Stenos and Bird, which was the main motivation for tension within the circus itself. I enjoyed the descriptions of their encounters but to me it always seemed that they were balanced very precariously on that fine line between love and hate, especially Stenos. They were certainly obsessed with each other either way.They and Boss made a good foundation to build the circus up from but, with the exception of Elena, none of the other characters were quite as dazzling. Still, it presents a very interesting position to pick things up from in the second book.All in all, I can appreciate that this author is a master weaver of the craft who has great vision but this particular structure didn’t work very well for me personally, which detracted from my enjoyment of the book.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Unexpectedly strange, creepy, and enthralling.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The book captures the sweet sorrow of a circus. In theory the circus should be happy and thrilling but more often seems sallow and frail. The story unfolds in a non-linear fashion, shifting time and place and between narrators. In a lesser skilled writer this might be jerky and annoying. Ms. Valentine does it fluidly. It reminded of printing b/w photos, staring intently at paper watching the image emerge. I hope this is the first of many Circus Tresaulti books.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    One of the blurbs on the cover calls this book a 'brutal gem'. That, without hyperbole, is an excellent description of this unique book.The Circus Tresaulti is hundreds of years old and has maintained itself despite wars, despite performers coming and going, despite the centuries. The ringmaster, Boss, has found a way to enhance some of her performers with copper mechanisms and metal pipes. Some of the performers have Boss' mechanics while some still have their own bones. The first half of the book is expositional, setting up the Circus' history and each performer's history. I admit I was getting impatient and finding it a slog. BUT you need this background once the action starts, when a Government Man (no, they're not any better in this world) visits the Circus with his own agenda for the performers.This novel is brutal, and hard, and luscious. It is a steampunk bon-bon. (And kudos for no captive animals in this circus!)

Book preview

Mechanique - Genevieve Valentine

MECHANIQUE

A Tale of the Circus Tresaulti

Genevieve Valentine

To My Family

Copyright © 2011 by Genevieve Valentine

Cover & Interior Art Copyright © 2011 by Kiri Moth

Additional Cover Design by Telegraphy Harness

Ebook design by Neil Clarke.

ISBN: 978-1-60701-296-2  (ebook)

ISBN: 978-1-60701-253-5 (trade paperback)

Prime Books

www.prime-books.com

No portion of this book may be reproduced by any means, mechanical, electronic, or otherwise, without first obtaining the permission of the copyright holder.

For more information, contact Prime Books.

1.

The tent is draped with strings of bare bulbs, with bits of mirror tied here and there to make it sparkle. (It doesn’t look shabby until you’ve already paid.)

You pay your admission to a man who looks like he could knock out a steer, but it is a slight young man who hands you your ticket: printed on thick, clean paper, one corner embossed in gold ink with a griffin whose mechanical wings shine in the shivering mirrorlight.

Tresaulti, it says, and underneath, Circus Mechanique, which is even more showy than the posters. Their bulbs are bare; who do they think they are?

Go inside, take a seat, the show is about to begin! the young man shouts to the crowd as he hands out the tickets, his hinged brass legs creaking. Above the noise the food vendor is shouting. Come and have a drink! Beer in glasses! Beer in glasses!

Inside some invisible ring the circus people have drawn in the muddy hill, there are the dancing girls and the barkers and jugglers. The musical man is playing within the tent—a cranking, tinkling mess of noise from this far away. The dancing girls shimmying outside the tent doors have metal hands or feet that glitter in the lights, and calling above it all is the young man with the brass legs who had come through the city a day ago and put up the Tresaulti posters.

Inside, the tent is round and bright, dozens of bulbs hanging from the rigging. Some of them have paper lanterns over them, so the light is a little pink or a little yellow.

The trapezes are already hanging from the topmost supports, stiff brackets of brass and iron, waiting for girls to inhabit them. The poster says Lighter than Air. The mood in the tent is, We’ll see. Not that you’re hoping for someone to fall—that would be morbid—but if you say something is lighter than air, well, the bets are on.

(These trapezes are imposters; they are for practice, they are for the beginning of the act. For the finale, the real trapezes walk out. Big George and Big Tom are lifted into place by Ayar the strongman, and they lock their seven-foot metal arms around the poles and hold themselves flat as tables. The girls scamper up and down their arms, hook their feet over Big George’s feet, and dangle upside down with their arms spread out like wings. When Big George swings back and forth, the girls let go, flying, and catch Big Tom’s legs on the other side.

But you do not know that this first trapeze is a false front. You have not yet been surprised.)

The tent comes alive as those who bought tickets file in; some of them have stopped at the food wagon, so the beer-smell cooks slowly under the bulbs. People talk among themselves, but carefully; the government is new (the government is always new), and you never know who’s working for whom.

A drum roll announces the beginning of the show, and the tent flaps open up for the entrance of an enormous woman in a black-sequined coat. Her curly dark hair springs out over her shoulders, and she wears red lipstick that seems unnaturally bright when she stands under the pink paper lanterns.

She raises her arms, and the crowd noisily hushes itself.

Ladies and gentlemen, she calls.

Her voice fills the air. It feels as if the tent grows to accommodate the words, the circle of benches pushing out and out, the tinny Panadrome swelling to an orchestra, the light softening and curling around the shadows, until all at once you are perched in a tiny wooden seat above a vast and a glorious stage.

The woman’s arms are still thrown wide, and you realize she has not paused, that her voice alone has changed the air, and when she goes on, Welcome to the Circus Tresaulti! you applaud like your life depends on it, without knowing why.

2.

THE MECHANICAL CIRCUS TRESAULTI

FINEST SPECTACLE ANYWHERE

MECHANICAL MEN beyond IMAGINATION

Astounding Feats of ACROBATICS

The Finest HUMAN CURIOSITIES

the World has ever SEEN

STRONGMEN, DANCING GIRLS

& LIVING ENGINES

FLYING GIRLS, LIGHTER than AIR

MUSIC from the HUMAN ORCHESTRA

BARGAIN ENTERTAINMENT for ONE and ALL

No Weapons Allowed

3.

The Circus Tresaulti has six acts.

All of them are set to Panadrome’s music. He is the most complicated of all Boss’s machines—he is a true marvel—but one look at that human face above the mechanized band is enough for most. The music seems to seep into their blood, turning them to metal from the inside out, trapping them inside some brass barrel they can’t see.

They press their hands hard to their chests until they feel their hearts beating, and they don’t look at him again.

It begins with jugglers, who move into the tent from outside. They toss clubs and glasses of water and torches. For their finale, each torch falls flame-first into a glass of water, extinguished with a hiss that’s lost in the applause.

The jugglers are human. You can see one with a false leg, but these days there are so many bombs and so many people to remake; one shiny leg is no surprise.

(They could be mechanical, too, if they chose, but the three jugglers have formed a little union against it. God knows if a false arm would be fast enough to catch anything.)

The dancing girls come next. They are all muscle under their filmy skirts—once they were soldiers or factory workers, they pack and unpack as much rig as the tumblers—but the audience demands dancing girls, so they make do. Over the years they have all learned the profit in the curled hand and the cocked hip.

Their eyes are rimmed with kohl and their lips are painted purple; they uncover as much as they can of their skin (you have to cover the scars, of course). They dress in whatever spangles they can come by. Their dancing names are Sunyat and Sola, Moonlight and Minette. (Their real names don’t matter; no one in the circus is real any more.)

For their finale, the strong man enters. The four of them climb onto his shoulders and his arms. They sit—legs crossed, arms raised—and he carries them off the stage as if they were no heavier than four cats.

The strongman’s name is Ayar. He was strong before he joined the circus. Boss made him stronger. He never asked for more strength; he didn’t want it when it was offered. He accepted only on condition—Jonah.

Jonah was injured fighting—a lung collapsed—and he had been getting worse, worse, worse, until the doctor used a bellows on him and told Ayar (who wore a different name then) to expect the end.

The Circus Tresaulti was in town. Ayar stood in the city square and stared at the picture of the Winged Man for a long time.

Then he carried Jonah out to the camp and asked the first person he saw, Where is the man with wings?

The boy was young, but he looked at Ayar for only a moment before he said, You’ll want Boss. Wait here.

Negotiations took an hour—a long hour, an hour Ayar remembers only in brief moments of shouting, of crying, of wanting to hit her but still holding Jonah—and then the worst was over.

When Ayar woke up, he had a new name that went with a body made of gears and pistons and a spine that could carry anything, and Jonah was standing over him, smiling, turning to show Ayar the little beetle-glossy hatch Boss had built for the mechanisms that powered Jonah’s new clockwork lungs.

(Boss made Ayar stronger, but Jonah she saved.)

Ayar doesn’t regret it. He is of a temperament to be liked, and of all at Tresaulti he has the least urge to complain. He struck a better bargain than some.

He lifts the dancing girls; he lifts benches from the front circle with five rubes from the audience on them. At the end of Ayar’s act, Jonah drives the small red truck through the opened flaps into the center of the ring. He climbs into the bed and turns around slowly, so everyone can get a look at the brass hump sticking out of his back. Then Ayar sets himself under the flatbed and lifts the truck with Jonah still standing on it.

Ayar is supposed to call when he is ready to lift, so Jonah can prepare, but it is always Jonah who calls, as if he knows when Ayar will be ready better than Ayar will.

(It had been Jonah—when he was so ill—who said, You will just not let this go, will you? knowing Ayar wouldn’t. Ayar got a new spine and new shoulders and new ribs, and his comrade back again.

Your comrade, Boss had said. She looked them over and raised an eyebrow and said, Sure, we’ll call you that.)

Outside, Ayar sets down the truck, and Jonah jumps off the flatbed, smiling, and cuffs Ayar lightly on the shoulder.

Nice lift, he says, every night.

Then it is Ayar’s turn to smile, though he doesn’t return the gesture. What can he do with his pile-driver arms, cuff Jonah back?

The next act is a duo. Stenos is the thin man in black who stands and offers his arms, who tosses the woman into the air, and catches her again. Bird is the woman, the one in grey, who flies. He is tall and graceful; she is like a skin-covered spring. They should be lovely to watch.

The audience does watch them—they are impossible not to watch—but what they see is rarely lovely.

The light in the tent seems to change as they go on, the dark creeping up around them. To focus on them is painful; sometimes it’s difficult to look at them directly, and their bodies become only impressions.

It is two acrobats performing. No, it is two acrobats dancing. No, it is two dancers fighting. No, it is two animals fighting.

After their act there is no applause.

The tumblers roll out just as the silence gets uncomfortable.

The tumblers are wild and bright, and have made their own family even within the circus troupe. They love more than anything to hear Boss call out, The Grimaldi Brothers! (It is only because of the Boss’s voice that anyone believes the name for a moment. Grimaldi Brothers; as if anyone would have eight grown children in days like these.)

Their names are little jumps: Alto, Brio, Spinto, Moto, Barbaro, Focoso, Altissimo, Pizzicato.

(Boss gave them the names. She never told them what they mean; they never bothered to find out. They make a living, almost, and they would be fools to ask questions.)

The aerialists are the finale.

The girls swing from the trapeze thirty feet above the ground. When a girl lets go, the audience gasps. When she twists and manages, impossibly, to grip the outstretched arms of the girl waiting to catch her, the audience roars.

When Big Tom and Big George walk out into the ring with their arms raised, people scream; applaud with relief.

Ayar hoists both men into the air like batons, and their mechanical hands close with sharp clicks over the rigging bars. The girls have locked up the trapezes and are perched on the rigging, their weight on the balls of their feet, their hands wrapped tightly on the bars.

There are six aerialists, even though it seems like more, like ten or twelve or twenty girls leaping into thin air. Elena is the captain; Fatima and Nayah are her lieutenants, and then there are Mina and Penna and Ying. They dress in shabby spangles and paint their faces to look the same, though if you know what to look for you can make them out: the captain; the girl with the strongest feet; the girl who will be first to jump down onto Tom; the girl who trembles.

They are swift and sure, and they don’t need to call warnings. After enough time, it’s easy to see when a body is preparing to leap; it’s easy to be ready.

By the end, Big Tom and Big George are swinging so far back and forth that a girl can hold his ankles on the upswing and just touch the upper edge of the tent. When she swings back to the center of the tent, reaches the other apex of the pendulum and lets go, there are two seconds in the air when she is weightless; the audience can feel it, and holds its breath.

They finish the act posed triumphantly: four of them wrapped around Big Tom’s and Big George’s arms; Ying and Mina, the smallest, hang by their knees from Tom and George’s feet, upside down and smiling.

The audience is never sitting at the end of the Circus Tresaulti; it is always on its feet, whistling and pounding the boards, knocking beer glasses into the dirt. They don’t notice the glasses; their eyes are on the golden lamplight, on the aerialists who shimmy down the rigging and take their bows on the ground, on the men who can only smile because their arms are still locked on the crossbars. It’s magic, and the audience applauds for as long as their stinging palms can stand it. (Who knows if something beautiful will ever come again?)

Later, after all the rubes have gone home chattering at one another about how fast the tumblers are, how agile the aerialists, Little George will step out of his brass legs and collect the beer glasses, even the ones with cracked sharp edges; glass these days is hard to find.

There was a seventh act, years ago.

He was the Winged Man, and when he swooped from the rigging and spread his wings the crowd would go wild, screaming and shouting, straining in their seats to reach for him as he sailed just over their outstretched fingers. Sometimes a woman would faint. Sometimes a man would faint.

There were always tears of joy; a man so beautifully married to machine was something that people needed to see after a war like they had been through. The technology in those days was weapons and radio signals; people needed to remember the art of the machine.

He landed after the applause shook the bleachers and the rigging so hard they looked ready to collapse; the light around him was tinged gold from the feathers in his wings, and he stood in the center of the ring and let them applaud him, that most amazing specimen of man.

That was before he fell.

4.

We’re the circus that survives.

Boss claims we were always around; she shows me glue-paper posters with the edges singed and flaking. The circuses are owned by a series of brothers with names I don’t know, and peopled with acts I’ve never heard of. (I recognize Grimaldi, the brothers’ false name.) Other than that, there’s nothing much to them but worn-out pictures. I don’t even know where she’s found them.

Some of the circuses have an eagle mascot; some have a lion, or a flaming hoop, or an eight-point star. The emblem of Tresaulti Circus is a griffin in profile, her hinged wings outstretched. A tattoo of that crest covers the top half of each of Boss’s wide, pale arms. You can see them in the ring, though the tattoos look like lace sleeves in the lantern light; you wouldn’t guess if you didn’t already know.

You have to really know what you’re looking for, when it comes to her.

The names of the other circuses are different from ours, so I know they can’t be our circus still going, but the only time I ask her about it (when I’m still young and stupid and too slow to get out of the reach of her arms), she clips me on the ear.

The name changes, Little George, she says, but the circus is always the same. She flicks the tattoo on her right arm as if to prove her point or wake the animal. Her nail slices her skin, and where the griffin’s metal wings have been grafted, the blood pools like oil.

For a moment I’m frightened, but I don’t know why. Nothing to worry about.

No one has wings like that any more; not since Alec died.

5.

This is what happens when you take a step:

Your first leg moves out from underneath you. By now your chest is already moving, your back foot ready to push.

(You will not notice, but here you are the tallest you will ever be, poised on one foot and ready for motion.)

Your first leg sweeps ahead, and your back foot powers you. Your weight is propelled forward, inertia dragging you back.

In this instant is the body-terror; here you are unbalanced, unable to rest or move back. Your arms are swinging, trying to keep the mechanism in motion. Here you are at the lowest point. Here is the danger of falling.

Your first leg hits the ground, heel first, and the worst is over. The chest is following, finding balance in this new place. Now if you lift the back foot, you keep hold of yourself. Your back leg swings to meet its brother, and you are standing still.

This is what happens when you take a step: you are moving closer to what you want.

This is what happens when an aerialist lets go of the swinging trapeze:

She swings with her legs forward and lifted, feet pressed together and toes pointed, for momentum.

By the time she lets go of the bar, her legs are already touching her chest, and she is in the pike position of a diver; she is already pulling her torso away, arcing backwards as fast as she can. Her arms are close to her chest like the folded wings of a bird, for speed.

Then her arms are straight, arms extended. Her spine is parallel to the ground. Her eyes are fixed ahead, and her path is clear; she is the bird in flight.

But the legs are coming up behind her; gravity has hold of her, and her legs are weights dragging her down to the floor forty feet beneath her.

Here, someone catches her. (Or they don’t.)

She wraps her hands around her partner’s wrists, and her momentum drives the swing. Her legs snap down, under her and forward; now the power of the pendulum has hold of her, and she will swing out, her toes just brushing the fabric of the tent. She will spend a moment weightless, motionless; a state of bliss.

This is what happens when an acrobat lets go of the swinging trapeze: the bird or the ground.

6.

I don’t know if it was cold or not the day Bird auditioned; I remember looking at her and going cold, but that’s not the same thing.

(She had another name back then, but I don’t remember it. It doesn’t do to hold too tightly to the old life.)

She approached the campsite with her head high and her hands visible—no weapons. She was in a dirty coat that must have looked sharp, once.

I was on watch, but I could only stand dumbly and gawp into a face that was so spare it hardly seemed she had one, just an expanse of skin with two gleaming eyes set in it.

I would like an audition, she said.

She said it without ego, as if I were the one who would audition her, as if I would know exactly what to do.

And I did; I got Boss.

Boss picked up a drill and came back holding it at her hip like a pistol. She carried something with her whenever someone came asking after work. Scares the cowards off, she said, and it was true. Most people just looking for a job balk at seeing a woman with a brass elbow in her hands.

But this time it was Boss who balked. When she caught a look at Bird’s face she stopped in her tracks, and for a moment I thought Boss was actually going to take a step back from her.

(Some moments are endless and terrifying, even if they turn out all right. Most moments with Bird in them are like that. This one was the first of many.)

Finally Boss said, What do you want?

Bird said, I want to audition.

Another long silence before Boss said, Inside. The griffin on her arm was trembling.

They went inside the tent. I got a You keep busy, nosey, from Boss, so I fetched tent spikes and coils of rope and kept looking over at the closed entrance of the tent, waiting for some sound, any sound, that would tell me what was going on.

It was the first time anyone had gotten inside the tent before being in the Circus. Usually people auditioned right in the campsite, so the rest of the troupe could come and watch. You could get a feel for most people by the way the troupe took to them or not.

When they came outside, Boss looked as if she’d seen a ghost. Bird was behind her; she had chalk on her hands, and something about her expression made her hard to look at.

We have a new aerialist, she said. Get the girls.

I made a run for it, circling the camp in under a minute, shouting at Panadrome and Barbaro and Jonah and Fatima to get the others and bring them to the tent where Boss was waiting.

Bird stood with her arms at her sides, her palms making chalky handprints on her coat, and looked at them all as they approached. Jonah smiled at her, as usual for Jonah, but everyone else seemed to hang back as if smoke was coming off her. Panadrome seemed surprised Boss had auditioned Bird alone; he looked back and forth between them,

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