Margins
The Ghost Engine book cover
The Ghost Engine
2018
First Published
3.30
Average Rating
348
Number of Pages

She thought she could change the world... When Lady Elizabeth Ada Lovelace, a beautiful, arrogant suffragette, purchased the 19th-century Algorithmic Engine in order to become the world's first programmer, she planned to break the shackles of inequality for Victorian women. Until her world became that of the machine... Instead she learns the true meaning of equality when she ends up trapped, brought down to the level of the machine. Inside the double-crossing computer, Elizabeth must match wits with a stubbornly idealistic ghost and a chillingly handsome doppelganger in the computer's endless series of mind games. But as the machine learns to become a sentient being, time is ticking away. Elizabeth finds herself falling in love with the ghost trapped in the machine. Together they are pitted in a race against the machine to escape before the Algorithmic Engine shuts down – killing them all. Now all their worlds hang in the balance.

Avg Rating
3.30
Number of Ratings
30
5 STARS
17%
4 STARS
30%
3 STARS
27%
2 STARS
20%
1 STARS
7%
goodreads

Author

Theresa Fuller
Theresa Fuller
Author · 2 books

I grew up with ghosts outside my door. They haunted dark trees and cemeteries and were the spirits of young girls betrayed by lovers. These stories were made real by my cousins who were always telling me how just last year a child around my age had been snatched by one of these ghosts – Pontianaks. And never seen again… Then there were the rumours of babies abandoned in the rainforest because they were girls. Whenever I met Chinese girls raised by Malay families, I wondered how much truth was in these stories. In Singapore it is considered a treat to bring children to Haw Par Villa, originally a venue for teaching traditional Chinese values. Here children are shown the ten views of Hell. I had nightmares for a week after each visit. Even today, I can visualize the demons as they tortured liars by pulling their tongues, elongating them grotesquely. This is probably why I never wanted to be a writer. Initially. Writers bend the truth. A little. Then I came to Australia for my education, met my husband, married and stayed. When my first son was born I read him stories. And somehow something stirred. I remembered my grandfather and how he would tell fairy tale after fairy tale, at least ten per night until in frustration he would record them to be spared reading the same stories repeatedly. Thus, in a strange land far away from my own family and what was familiar, I began to write. And in my stories, I could come home. To a land where boys turn into crickets and mousedeer dance laughing upon the backs of crocodiles. Theresa currently resides with her family in Sydney, Australia. You can find her on Facebook.

548 Market St PMB 65688, San Francisco California 94104-5401 USA
© 2025 Paratext Inc. All rights reserved