A man is riding a bike on a hill.
Search
Close this search box.
A watercolor illustration of a typewriter with a note on it.

Nyssa Glass and the Caper Crisis by H.L. Burke

by Kellyn Roth |
May 23, 2017

Title: Nyssa Glass and the Caper Crisis
Series: Nyssa Glass, #0.5
Author: H.L. Burke
Genre: steampunk (science fiction)
Age Range: upper middle grade/young adult
Overall Rating: 4 stars

Nyssa Glass and the Caper Crisis by H.L. Burke

33884048

Orphaned cat burglar Nyssa Glass intends to outwit her rotten fate.
“Adopted” by her incarcerated uncle’s gang of thieves, she breaks into homes and picks pockets to repay her family debt and one day buy her freedom from their dark enterprise. Mechanically adept and determined, Nyssa longs to attend Miss Pratchett’s School for Mechanically Minded Maids and make an honest life she can take pride in.
She wasn’t made to steal things. She was made to create and fix them.
However, before she can make her escape, the head of the gang taps her for a new assignment, one her conscience cannot bear. Nyssa is faced with a heartrending decision: sacrifice everything or become the very thing she’s desperate to escape.

Buy on Amazon ~ Add on Goodreads

That was a short but delightful read! I wasn’t expecting too much from it (short stories aren’t always my favorite, especially prequel short stories), but this was really a cool story.
I liked Nyssa, although as this was a short story, there wasn’t a lot of time for tons of character development. But she still seems like an interesting character – and she was definitely a good person, even though her circumstances forced her to do some bad things.
Mr. Calloway was also very sweet. I really enjoyed reading about him, and I’m excited to see more of him (I think?) in the rest of the series.
There wasn’t time for a lot of world building, so I won’t comment on that. The ending was also a little bit rushed – perhaps even a little hard to understand – but I think we can attribute that to a shortage of space.
As far as content, there was some violence (which any teen should be able to handle; more sensitive middle-graders might not want to read this or to read this with their parents), but no language or sexual content.
Overall, this was an intriguing prequel. I’m looking forward to reading the rest of the series – and especially to see how the author fits all the backstory revealed in this novel in without plot-dumping (if she does).

~Kellyn Roth~

Bloglovin’ · Goodreads · Facebook

p.s.

Have you ever read anything by H.L. Burke? Do you read/enjoy steampunk novels?

What do you think of my thoughts?

2 Responses

  1. Yesss. *coughs* I’m not sure why I’m obsessed with this books but I am … I’m so happy that you’re finally reading them. XD
    Ahhh … you’re in for … shockingness, Madame … so I’ve been reading these in the order they came out (still haven’t read The Electric Heart yet, but I literally just got the ebook for the complete series so I’m going to do that as soon as I finish a couple of the many other books I’m currently reading … *shifts eyes*) so like … ahhhhh. You’re in for some pain. *snods seriously* This one filled in backstory for me rather then laying the foundation. Yeppity yeppers. To answer your questions …:
    Have you ever read anything by H.L. Burke?: Pretty sure you know the answer to this one … 😉 Ooh! So Goodreads says she’s my third most read author. I’ve apparently read 18 of her books which is like … Slightly scary …
    Do you read/enjoy steampunk novels?: I haven’t really read that many! I liked the ones that I read (Nyssa and … like … one other thing …) so far but like … I don’t know. Maybe I’m not looking in the right places? I haven’t really even heard about many other steampunk books … Anyway.
    So yep. I have a slightly out of proportion excitement that you’re reading these, Kell. 😛 Buuuuut, yeah. XD

    1. For me, it’s weird to imagine actually being heartbroken over my sister’s stories. I always emotionally distance myself from them … XD Yeah, I’m a weird marshmallow.
      Whoa, eighteen? I think I’ve read … maybe five. Or six. Yeah … I don’t really read her books a lot …

Leave a Reply to Kellyn RothCancel reply

Follow my blog

Want to receive notifications of new posts? Let\'s make this happen!

Join 1,618 other subscribers