| |||||||
| China Mieville Discuss China Mièville's novels and short stories here. Includes exclusive interview! |
| Welcome to the Science Fiction Fantasy Chronicles forums | |
| Welcome to the chronicles network, the UK's largest - and friendliest - science fiction and fantasy forums!
If you love to read or watch science fiction and fantasy, you've come to the right place to be among like-minded people. And we count published authors, editors, and agents among our members, so have an especially strong community of aspiring writers. To post or reply to a topic you'll need to register - but don't worry, it's free and we don't pass on any of your details to anyone else. | |
![]() |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools | Rate Thread |
| | #61 (permalink) |
| Wherever I Am, I'm There | Re: Perdido Street Station I'm now about 500 pages in and will certainly finish it. It began to pick up for me once the dreamshit was fed to the grub and now I am wanting to know what's coming next. The concealed references to ancient weapons technologies, government conspiracies and other planes of existence have gripped me. I'll read the whole of this thread once I finish and then add my comments, but I see why people like it so much now. He does tend to use 5 pages where one paragraph might suffice though. |
| | |
| | #62 (permalink) | |
| Moderator Join Date: Mar 2005 Location: Australia, Victoria
Posts: 9,224
| Re: Perdido Street Station Quote:
| |
| | |
| | #63 (permalink) |
| Bearly Believable Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: UK: ENGLAND:
Posts: 12,141
| Re: Perdido Street Station I read PSS a few years ago, followed by The Scar and Iron Council. I liked all three, but had trouble empathising with the Scar's characters. The world of Bas Lag, especially New Crobuzon, is so richly invoked; thank heaven's I haven't started to smell it, though! One thing: Mieville has created a world where, I'd guess, most of us would understand the various opposition groups, if not empathise with all of their members. I wonder, is this his how Mieville sees our world, e.g. London? Is this why he has his particular political stance? Anyway, back to my re-reading of PSS! |
| | |
| | #64 (permalink) | ||
| Spiff's Stunt Double | Re: Perdido Street Station Quote:
I mean, the cable laying sequence? What the zarking fardwarks was THAT about? ![]() Quote:
| ||
| | |
| | #65 (permalink) |
| I also mend shoes Join Date: Jun 2005 Location: Greater London
Posts: 289
| Re: Perdido Street Station I read that bit yesterday and was just about to post on the very topic. Why did it need to go on for sooooo long. I don't envy the job of an editor dealing with a book of the size and complexity of PSS. But then, who knows, maybe the cable laying sequence was 50 pages long before the editor got started! |
| | |
| | #66 (permalink) | ||
| Spiff's Stunt Double | Re: Perdido Street Station Quote:
...suddenly we're getting a whole chapter devoted to the sediment under the streets of New Crobuzon. ![]() Huge spanner in the drama, tension gone, reader wondering why any author would assume he'd actually care about the dirt under the streets at this point. I don't seem to remember anything quite so bad in The Scar. Maybe he's got it under a little more control now. Quote:
Still a great read though. | ||
| | |
| | #67 (permalink) |
| I also mend shoes Join Date: Jun 2005 Location: Greater London
Posts: 289
| Re: Perdido Street Station Well, finished PSS yesterday evening. As I said before I enjoyed it, but didn't love it and the ending didn't suddenly pull it all round for me. I could well be alone in this, but I think the main reason why I never quite engaged with it was that the whole story seemed a little contrived. I know that by definition fiction is made up (I'm not that naive), but the whole set up from Isaac meeting Yag, to the hatching of the cocoon just seemed, well, as if China knew where he wanted to be halfway through the book and worked back. As a result, the story didn't have a natural flow to it. As a work of speculative fiction, I enjoyed the speculative elements of it, but I think the fiction side of it let it down for me. |
| | |
| | #69 (permalink) |
| Bearly Believable Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: UK: ENGLAND:
Posts: 12,141
| Re: Perdido Street Station I've just finished rereading PSS, five years since I first read it. The book seemed far easier to read this time. I suppose that in the meantime (and having read Scar and IC) I find it easier to visualise this odd world, and its even odder inhabitants, without having to do so much of it consciously. I have to agree about the cable-laying; it does go on and on. I suppose CM, who (I feel) likes everything to be just so, felt he had to describe this in detail, if only to stop us wondering how, in a city bulging with secret police, the cable could be installed in such a short time. I just wish he'd achieved it in fewer words/pages. I'm in two minds about Jack's appearance. It's very deus ex machina, but then there was no real need for the situation he resolved to come about in the first place; CM must have had some other purpose in having him appear; I just wish I knew what it was. (It can't have just been to get him and Yag to meet, can it?) I don't feel up to the Scar and IC jst at the moment. In the meantime, perhaps I should try King Rat.... |
| | |
| | #70 (permalink) |
| Heretic Join Date: Jun 2004 Location: India
Posts: 1,730
| Re: Perdido Street Station Hey yeah, King Rat's a much lighter book, more like a superhero graphic novel story, and much fun. One side-effect is the characters are drawn more superficially than in PSS and Scar. But it's a good fun and gory read. |
| | |
| | #71 (permalink) |
| Wherever I Am, I'm There | Re: Perdido Street Station I've finished it! Woo Hoo! I actually thought there were quite a number of passages like the "cable-laying" one, where there were pages of detailed descriptions with no action, followed by a chapter in which the plot advances more in a few pages than in the last 100. I like the "page-turning" kind of book, the ones that I can't put down because I really must find out what happens next. The fact that this sat in a pile on the edge of my bed for so long is evidence that it didn't do it for me. So I take onboard what you say about 'The Scar', but I won't be reading it very soon. I don't have much more to add. Obviously some great ideas in the book - the Kephri insect creatures, the Cacti creatures, the Remades, the city of New Crobuzon itself, the crisis engine, the construct, the Weaver. The suggestion that all of this was a result of some ancient weapons technology that went wrong in the distant past was interesting. I read that after creating such a world, Mieville should have written more than a "bug-hunt", but that wasn't a problem for me. I think they were rescued from impossible situations a few too many times by the Weaver for my liking. Only he still wasn't human, he could never be fully human, he could not break his beak or remove his clawed feet. So, I would have thought he would have taken up Jack Half-a-Prayer's offer. He had more in common with the Remades. |
| | |
| | #72 (permalink) | |
| Registered User Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: France
Posts: 1,127
| Re: Perdido Street Station Quote:
Hi, Crouching Dragon! I feel the same. Although I'm enjoying this read a lot, and I love setting and writing, and see why this book wouldn't be what it is without the wealth of descriptions, and completely admire China's mastering of language... I also think the plot is too diluted. I keep going back to it because I am intrigued, but, at the same time, I just read ten pages a day, a chapter at most. There are F books like ASoIaF by GRR Martin that are absolute un-putdownable (albeit much less well written), but this one is not. As much as I admire Miéville, I feel there's a bit of something at this novel---oh gosh, I wouldn't mean to say something too strong, so don't take it literally--- but... but... a feeling of it being a little "wanted", "searched for", a sort of exercise in style, as if the author wished to be considered a cultivated, playing-with-our-minds literary high-flying bestard (don't throw stones at me, I do admire him, I do). When I say "high-playing", I'm not saying that his style is complicated or avanguardish in any way. It's rather simple writing, probably to let the setting stand out. It's the whole exercice that seems a little contrived. And, btw, it's the only book by CM I've read, and --as someone in this thread put it--- it's probably not the best place to start with. Oh, Perdido Street Station is still a great book, and maybe I'll revise my critique once I've finished it. Last edited by Giovanna Clairval; 25th September 2007 at 11:28 AM. | |
| | |
| | #74 (permalink) |
| Cyber Pest Join Date: May 2006 Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 128
| Re: Perdido Street Station I love this book, the details were fantastic, the introduction of the alien races, the steampunk existence of the Bas-Lag populous. The power that exists on their world is great, but the ending was not what I expected and looking back it was the best ending he could give, pure genius. |
| | |
| | #75 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Nov 2007 Location: New York
Posts: 6
| Re: Perdido Street Station Just finished this last night. It was my second CM book, first being 'King Rat'. It was very vivid, good colorful images. I had a real problem though around page 300 ppbk, when action really started to rise. It seemed like various threads of plot were stepped away from for far too long (Isaac & Lin) and new characters were introduced willy nilly. (The merc gang etc.) And while scoring high on a 'cool' chart, didn't do enough for me since we spent so long being introduced to 'Saac and co. Isaac wasn't much of a protagonist, he needed (and inexplicably received) a lot from other people. The ending was alright, I'm glad there was a re-visitation / closure on the yag & lin story arcs, just think they could have come sooner, or maybe we could have seen more of them placed throughout the story. |
| | |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| Rate This Thread | |
| |