![]() |
|
|
« #24 - Slow Learner, by Thomas Pynchon | Main | #26 - Perdido Street Station, by China Miéville » #25 - King Rat, by China Miéville
King Rat is pretty obviously a first novel, but here I think it's a strength; while the style is a bit rough, Miéville doesn't seem to be encumbered by any preconceived notions of what can and cannot be done in this type of fiction. King Rat draws heavily from folklore (the Pied Piper of Hamelin, and Anansi the spider, for example) but it never quite gives up its unique point of view or surrenders to the mundane. I will say that the deeper I thought about the book the more simple questions I had (where did these supernatural characters come from? What sort of society do they have, how come they look human, etc? How do they live their day to day lives?), but those are mostly questions of a reader used to realist fiction, and they are out of place in a sympathetic reading of this book. (That I cannot refrain from asking such questions is probably the biggest reason that I am not a dedicated reader of fantasy and science fiction, and also why I have never written a successful piece in either genre.) It was rollicking good fun. I was particularly pleased with how Miéville handled the drum and bass elements of the novel. Very few writers can do anything worthwhile with music, but he was quite successful at capturing the feel of the music and the drum and bass subculture. Next, Perdido Street Station, also by China Miéville. Posted by August on 05.24.07 at 5:32 PM | Comments (0) CommentsPost a comment
|
More Vestige.orgBlog Archives
Bookish Blogs
Recommended |