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Perdido Street Station

pinkunicorn writes: "Perdido Street Station (2000) is new British writer China Miéville's second novel (the first was King Rat (1998), his latest is The Scar (2002), a sequel to Perdido Street Station). Perdido Street Station is the coolest fantasy novel I've read for a good while, if a fantasy novel is what it is. The protagonist of the book, Isaac Grimnebulin, is a scientist and there are a number of high-tech things in the book, but there's also magic (though it's called thaumaturgy)." Read on for the rest of pinkunicorn's review. Perdido Street Station author China Mieville pages 867 publisher Pan rating 8 reviewer pinkunicorn ISBN 0345443020 summary Fantasy with science and an attitude

The action takes place entirely in a city, New Crobuzon, and it's a large city.

There are loads of things here that are taken from outside the standard fantasy mould. Lots of the inhabitants of New Crobuzon are not human. This isn't revolutionary in itself, but they are far from the normal Tolkien-influenced critters. There are khepri, a weird species that doesn't even look the same for both sexes. The males are rather small and look like beetles while the females are as large as humans and look like a mixture of humans (lower half) and beetles (upper half). They can't talk, but communicate with scents and sign language. There are garuda, which are a kind of bird men. There are walking cacti. There are vodyanoi who live in water and can shape it to sculptures.

One day, Isaac Grimnebulin get a visit from Yagharek, a garuda who has had his wings taken off for some offense that he doesn't want to talk about. He wants Isaac to help him fly again. Isaac takes on the job in a very thorough way and starts investigating various other animals that can fly to find out how it's best done.

This is different from most fantasy. Normally, magic is the only science there is (and often that isn't treated like a science either). In New Crobuzon this isn't the case at all. There is magic, but it isn't the only thing. There are also photography (of sorts), printing presses for underground newspapers, intelligent cleaning robots, air ships and mechanical computers, all together. As if all this wasn't enough to make you think of science fiction, towards the end there's even an example of prime Star Trek technobabble, but in a fantasy mode.

In spite of its bulk, Perdido Street Station is a pretty fast read. The plot as such isn't too complex, but it drives the story forward nicely. What I think really stands out are the descriptions: China Miéville is very good at conjuring moods and environments and getting the reader to realize exactly how something looks, even in an entirely alien environment. China Miéville claims Mervyn Peake as one of his favorite authors, and the similarities to Gormenghast in feel are sometimes striking.

Perdido Street Station feels quite a bit like cyberpunk in a fantasy setting. Most of the common signs are there: a somewhat run-down city environment, technology development in a guerilla manner, drugs, computers, body modification (through surgery and magic instead of gene technology, but still) and quite a bit of attitude. I'm looking forward to see if this book will leave as much of a footprint in the fantasy genre as Neuromancer did in the science fiction genre.

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5 of 104 comments (clear)

  1. Re:1 post by teamhasnoi · · Score: 3, Informative

    Now that's out of the way, this book is similar to "Angel Station" by Walter Jon Williams. If you like the reviewed one, you'd most likely enjoy AS..

  2. King Rat? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Strange, I thought "King Rat" was a James Clavell novel.

  3. thaumaturgy by Ron+Harwood · · Score: 4, Informative

    thaumaturgy - The working of miracles or magic feats. According to dictionary.com.

  4. Re:Great book by DJSpray · · Score: 2, Informative

    YES, potential readers, please be aware that although I quite enjoyed the book, it does follow along in the tradition of grotesque horror, with reanimated corpses, brain-sucking, lurking horrors, slaughterhouses, mutilation, torture, trips through sewers, vividly described mutated aliens.

    (Of course, if you're a slashdot reader, this will probably increase rather than decrease your interest in the book... but I would not recommend it for, say, my mother...)

  5. Another Review by Feersum+Endjinn · · Score: 2, Informative

    I found this review more helpful. I haven't had a chance to read this book yet, but it's on my list!

    I found this book review through Locus Magazine , which is the best online source of sf and fantasy news that I've found.