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Five Books / Series to Read if You Like The Laundry Files

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Published on July 20, 2018

The Hanging Tree cover art by Stephen Walters
The Hanging Tree cover art by Stephen Walters

The Laundry Files is a cross-genre series; it’s British, but beyond that it transgresses wildly by crossing the streams of normally rigid marketing categories. We have comedy, we have horror, we have magic, we have technology, we have spies. So: what else is out there that has a not-dissimilar feel to the Laundry Files?

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The Labyrinth Index

The Labyrinth Index

The works I want to point you at today all share three or more from a set of six attributes: they’re mostly British, their protagonists mostly work for bureaucracies (government or police, but also academia), and they mostly involve magic. They may also share other attributes—humour, time travel, and a seasoning of steampunk—but the latter three are a little more optional.

So, without further ado, here’s my “if you liked the Laundry Files you may like these” list.

 

 

The Peter Grant Series by Ben Aaronovitch

Midnight Riot (UK title: Rivers of London)
Moon over Soho
Whispers Under Ground
Broken Homes
Foxglove Summer
The Hanging Tree

Police Constable Peter Grant of the London Metropolitan Police is a young, snarky, mixed-race cop from the east end. We first meet him interviewing a witness at a murder scene in London. Only problem is, the witness is a ghost. Peter’s unwelcome (because unverifiable) report comes to the attention of his higher-ups, and not in a good way: he’s reassigned to The Folly, a small and very eccentric station in the city that, he rapidly learns, deals with the kind of stuff nobody else in the huge, technocratic bureaucracy of the Met wants to acknowledge—namely, magic.

Apprenticed to the last registered wizard in the UK, Detective Chief Inspector Thomas Nightingale, Peter and fellow apprentice magic cop Leslie May find themselves sucked into the pursuit of magical criminals and the affairs of London’s local gods and goddesses.

So, here’s the thing: Aaronovitch nails 21st century British police bureaucracy and modern London’s vibrant, rich, multi-ethnic society. Peter Grant is a distinctively original cop, with family ties a-plenty in the streets he patrols. And there’s a seriously creepy vibe to the back story that gradually unpacks itself along the way to explaining why there is only one surviving registered wizard in London. Seriously? If you want more stuff like the Laundry Files? This is your number one destination.

 

The Shadow Police Series by Paul Cornell

London Falling
The Severed Streets
Who Killed Sherlock Holmes?

While the Peter Grant books mostly focus on one wisecracking protagonist (albeit an organization man), the Shadow Police series recognizes that modern policing—especially detective work—is a team activity. In this case, the detective team of Quill, Costain, Sefton, and Ross find themselves trying to work out why a gang boss’s head exploded in front of them in the interview room when he was about to spill his guts. As their investigation expands they find themselves sucked down a horrifying rabbit hole of kidnapping, child sacrifice, murder, and worse. London, it appears, faces supernatural threats from time to time, and at least one of them was so deadly that it wiped out the previous Metropolitan Police team that policed the occult; now their lives are on the line as they try to prevent the “smiling man” from taking the whole of London to hell.

While the Peter Grant series has a rich vein of humour running through it, and a submerged vein of horror that occasionally breaks out, this is reversed in the Shadow Police books: occasional wise-cracking aside, they’re tense with foreboding and a sense of creeping doom that never quite leaves you.

 

The Rise and Fall of D.O.D.O. by Neal Stephenson & Nicole Galland

Okay, so neither Neal Stephenson nor Nicole Galland are British, but The Rise and Fall of D.O.D.O. is in other respects a good match for the same micro-genre as the Laundry Files. We have a secret research project run by the Pentagon, which is trying to establish why magic stopped working globally on one particular day in 1851 (and more importantly, whether it can be rebooted by technological means). We have a meet cute between Melisande, a very academic linguist, and Tristan, a West Point graduate with expertise in manipulating bureaucracy. Not to mention an egomaniacal (and extraordinarily old) Hungarian witch, a not-actually-mad professor’s attempt to verify the Many World’s Hypothesis by building a machine to carry out the Schrödinger’s Cat experiment (spoiler: the cat survived to a ripe old age), and then TIME TRAVEL. Lots of time travel, to the 16th century and the Victorian era. Lots of exciting ways to die as a result of time travel! And did I mention the bureaucracy?

This is clearly a collaboration, and what Galland brings to it is a lighter and more accessible tone than your standard Neal Stephenson doorstep, rising almost to the level of a Pratchett comedy in its better sequences. It’s a lightweight, fun romp, and I’m looking forward to the expected sequel.

 

The Invisible Library Series by Genevieve Cogman

The Invisible Library
The Masked City
The Burning Page
The Lost Plot

We’ve come a long way to get here, but The Invisible Library drops another circle on the Venn diagram of our micro-genre, this time adding an intermittent steampunk flavour. We live in a multiverse; in particular, all fictional worlds are real, existing somewhere on a continuum between Order (repressively dominated by Dragons) and Chaos (cavorted in by the Fae—who are always the protagonist of their own narrative). Outside of these worlds lies the Invisible Library, an infinitely large extradimensional institution whose librarians catalog and collect unique books from the entire multiverse (and by “collect” I mean “steal”).

Irene is a junior librarian (or perhaps “spy” or “crazed bibliophile thief”) whose superiors assign her to a version of London in a chaos-infested realm—complete with steam carriages, fae ambassadors, a detective who is a dead ringer for Sherlock Holmes, incompetent werewolves, and clockwork alligators. Irene is a drily understated and extremely competent agent, but frequently finds herself struggling against challenges that threaten to outmatch her, both external and from within the bureaucracy of the Library itself.

In the hands of a less accomplished author this collection of tropes could easily turn into a disorganized and chaotic mess, but Cogman skillfully juggles seemingly disparate elements so skillfully hat she makes it look effortless. Again: the very highest quality of popcorn reading, and completely addictive.

 

The Chronicles of St. Mary’s by Jodi Taylor

Just One Damned Thing After Another
A Symphony of Echoes
A Second Chance
A Trail Through Time
No Time Like the Past
What Could Possibly Go Wrong
Lies, Damned Lies, and History
And the Rest is History

Max is an obsessive, somewhat damaged, history PhD when she manages to land a research position at the St. Mary’s Institute for Historical Research, one of those eccentric and small colleges British universities somehow can’t seem to get rid of. However, St. Mary’s harbours a secret in the shape of a small fleet of time machines, which the historians use “to investigate major historical events in contemporary time”. Keeping from damaging the course of history is easier said than done, especially when the incompetent and brutal Time Police show up and some of your colleagues are manipulative psychopaths: and time travel is far from safe hobby for academic historians as Max rapidly discovers (pursued by carnivorous dinosaurs and an abusive co-worker; nearly roasted during the destruction of the Great Library at Alexandria). And then there’s always the fun of writing grant proposals and ensuring the Institute can get enough funding to repair the damage the eccentric and accident-prone academics keep inflicting on the place.

Taylor’s time traveling academics are a far cry from the Laundry but they share a common feature in the shape of heedlessly damaging bureaucratic forces that are almost as much of a threat as the Black Death and time-travelling murderers. Max is a fierce but occasionally fragile protagonist, with a line in sarcastic wise-cracks that reminds me of someone else …

 

Honorable Mentions

This has of necessity been a really short list. Lots of good stuff didn’t make the cut, and if I had room I’d rabbit on about some or all of: John Dies in the End (David Wong), Bookburners (Max Gladstone et al), Zero Sum Game (SL Huang), and the Rachel Peng series (K.B. Spangler). But I’m out of space for now!

Originally published July 2017.

Charles Stross was born in Leeds, England, in 1964. He has worked as a pharmacist, software engineer, and freelance journalist, but now writes full-time. To date, Stross has won three Hugo Awards and been nominated twelve times. He has also won the Locus Award for Best Novel, the Locus Award for Best Novella, and has been shortlisted for the Arthur C. Clarke and Nebula Awards. The Labyrinth Index, the latest novel in the Laundry Files series, will be available from Tor Books and Tor.com Publishing in October 2018. You can visit his blog, follow his Facebook page, or find him on Twitter at @cstross.

About the Author

About Author Mobile

Charles Stross

Author

Charles Stross is a British SF writer, born in Leeds, England, and living in Edinburgh, Scotland. He has worked as a tech writer, a programmer, a journalist, and a pharmacist; he holds degrees in Pharmacy and in Computer Science. He has won two Hugo Awards for his short fiction, and his work has been extensively praised by, among others, Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman.

Stross is sometimes regarded as being part of a new generation of British science fiction writers who use the devices of "space opera" and "hard SF" to innovative new ends; others of this cohort include Alastair Reynolds, Ken MacLeod, Peter Hamilton, Liz Williams, and Richard Morgan. His inspirations and influences include Vernor Vinge, Neal Stephenson, William Gibson, Bruce Sterling, and Iain M. Banks, among other cyberpunk and post-cyberpunk writers, as well as older figures such as H. P. Lovecraft, Roger Zelazny, and Robert A. Heinlein.

Among Stross’s more recent novels are The Revolution Business and The Trade of Queens (in his “Merchant Princes” series), The Apocalypse Codex (part of the “Laundry” series of novels and stories), Rule 34, and, with Cory Doctorow, The Rapture of the Nerds.

http://www.antipope.org/charlie/

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