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The City & The City [Paperback]

China Mieville
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (85 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 373 pages
  • Publisher: Pan; 1st edition (1 Jan 2010)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0330493108
  • ISBN-13: 978-0330493109
  • Product Dimensions: 19.6 x 13 x 2.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (85 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 76,499 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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China Miéville
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Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

Certain writers absolutely defy categorisation – and China Miéville is most definitely of that rarefied company. His prose is exhilarating, poetic, coruscating with ideas and atmosphere – and it has enhanced a body of work that has almost no parallels in modern writing. Heretofore, if Miéville has brushed shoulders with any identifiable genres, they are those of fantasy and science fiction – which makes his remarkable new book, The City and The City, such a surprise. The author’s publishers compare this novel to Philip K Dick, Raymond Chandler and 1984 – which at least gives a series of corollaries for this book, however tentative. There are elements here of the crime thriller, but very much refracted through Miéville’s highly individual imagination.

The body of a murdered woman is discovered in the remarkable, crumbling European city of Besźel. Such a crime is par for the course for Inspector Tyador Borlú, who is the premier talent of the Extreme Crime Squad – until his investigations uncover evidence that bizarre and terrifying forces are at work – and soon both he and those around him will be in considerable peril. He must undertake an odyssey, a journey across borders both physical and psychical, to the city which is both a complement and rival to his own, that of Ul Qoma.

Like all of China Miéville’s work, The City and The City will not be to everyone’s taste – the very individuality of the prose and the surrealistic inventiveness will not attract those preferring more prosaic fare. But for readers who hanker after untrammelled imagination – and look for literary fare unlike anything they have read before (even, it has to be said, by Miéville himself), then this is a journey to be undertaken. But with caution, perhaps… --Barry Forshaw --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Review

'A gripping philosophical thriller about how human fears and prejudice can reshape reality.'
--The Times

'In this mind-boggling novel, which includes elements of detective fiction, sci-fi and political thriller, Miéville uses all the imaginative skills that have helped him succeed with titles such as Perdido Street Station.' --Bookseller's Choice, The Bookseller

'A fantasy thriller in which a murder case spins its inspector on an existential journey from the curious tumbledown city of Beszel and into its parallel metropolis.'
--The Times

'China Miéville is partial to a fabricated city setting, and he has outdone himself here by constructing two adjoining Eastern European city-states, Beszel and Ul Qoma, and their complex and political and linguistic systems. Against this impressively realized backdrop is set a nourish thriller.' --Observer

'An original fantasy thriller.'
--Express

`Wrapping your brain around the strangeness is part of the pleasure. It pushes up against the boundaries of possibilities to provoke a reassessment of our own reality.'
--Guardian Review

Inside This Book (Learn More)
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Front Cover | Copyright | Excerpt | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

85 Reviews
5 star:
 (29)
4 star:
 (27)
3 star:
 (16)
2 star:
 (9)
1 star:
 (4)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (85 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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30 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Dystopian Police Procedural, 7 Mar 2010
By 
This review is from: The City & The City (Paperback)
The City & The City is the latest by an author who has garnered quite a reputation these past years for being original, insightful and basically pretty damn good. The City & The City comes loaded with plaudits, A Nebula Award nomination, and enough cover quotes to ensure even the most insecure author feels the love. Miéville is even compared to George Orwell and Franz Kafka...

Now here's a thing, with all this adulation from the critics you might think I'd be extremely keen to read this book, right? Well the truth is I've wanted to read something of China's work for a while, but I was by no means certain I'd like it. I couldn't help but wonder if it might all be drearily pretentious. You know the kind of book? Difficult to read, self-indulgent drivel, that our cultural tastemakers often effuse over. The ones that leave us mere mortals - who're only looking for a good read - feeling inadequate on account of our inability to invoke the same level of excitement for them. The quote from Socialist Review on the cover also made me groan a bit. Knowing China's politics - was this going to be a disguised party manifesto?

So a little apprehensive and ready to stand against the wave of support for this book if need be, I plunged in, and bugger me - It IS really good! My initial reservations turned out to be completely unfounded. I didn't even mind that it's told in the first person, which as a point of preference is not by favourite narrative perspective.

Inspector Tyador Borlú is the person telling this tale, an investigator in a specialist division of the Bes'el City Police. Borlú is assigned to investigate the murder of a foreign woman, whose body is discovered abandoned by his officers. From the outset there are unaswered questions regarding the identity of the woman, and her activities in Bes'el. As the investigation unfolds, it becomes apparent that Borlú is being drawn into a mysterious series of events; the investigation of which both threatens his life, and his understanding of his country.

Bes'el City is an invented City-State, located it would seem somewhere in Eastern Europe. It exists in exactly the same physical space as another city, Ul-Qoma. The streets, the buildings; all the features of the two cities would appear part of the one city to an outsider, although they are internationally different political entities. To their respective inhabitants they're entirely different worlds. They have different customs, taboos, dress, levels of affluence, language inflections etc and what's more they have developed a culture of not seeing the other - literally. They actively seek to avoid noticing their neighbours from the other city, even if they're standing in the same street, they're in another country. To fail to acknowledge the strict protocols associated with these customs is Breach, and summons a third and mysterious entity by that name to dispense justice.

The story follows Borlu's investigations in a noirish manner, and this novel has many of the essential characteristics of that sub-genre. It is a kind of dystopian police procedural. The reader is a witness to Borlu's investigation in a manner which slowly reveals the nature of his reality, and the challenges to that reality as fresh details of the case emerge and the plot develops. The murder trail leads Borlú out of the confines of Bes'el, into Ul-Qoma and beyond, not just physically but mentally as well.

This is a book about perception and about identity, about cultural indoctrination, and the nurturing of exclusivity and otherness for larger social and economic ends. It's also a tale of misinformation and conspiracy. At times I was reminded of Balkan identities, the Palestine/Israel situation, and Turkish politics with its national obsession for the Deep State. Yes it's political, but not I think in any narrow ideological sense. It can take a little while to become familiar with the dreamlike landscape of Miéville's setting, and to appreciate the fullness of the idea he's constructed. Once realised it's difficult not to be awed by his inventiveness, and marvel at its execution.

This novel has a head full of ideas, but in its heart beats a classic detective story. Crucially, it never forgets to be entertaining. There may not be as much Sci-Fi/Fantasy as some might hope, but there's plenty of vision. Bravo Mr Miéville! I for one am now converted, you fully deserve your plaudits.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A thought-provoking premise, let down by some technical issues, 27 Jan 2011
Have you ever been walking down a street and spotted someone you only half know, a colleague or acquaintance? And then you pretend that you haven't seen each other until you reach an acceptable distance apart, the feeling of 'corriearklet' as Douglas Adams put it?

I think that's what this book is about.

This is the first China Mieville book I have read, so I didn't have any real expectations beyond the review I had read in Interzone magazine. So I was aware I was entering into a police procedural/noir-styled escapade with a slight sci-fi twist. The story follows Tyador Borlu, a detective trying to solve the murder of a young unidentified woman. The real meat of the story, however, is the backdrop of the two intertwined cities of vaguely Turkish Ul Qoma and vaguely Czech Beszel (the actual location of the cities is never given). While the main story arc is competent, for me at least it was the mechanics of the shared yet separated existence of the cities that drove me through the story. Is there some strange inter-dimensional rift? Or are they separated only by groupthink and political motivation? How similar is the 'unseeing' employed by the inhabitants of the cities to my own interaction with the city I live in? How do the seemingly all-powerful Breach work to maintain the separation of the cities?

And what must it feel like to live there? I can only imagine a constant feeling of corriearklet.

The book's only major flaw is that it fails in the difficult task of capturing that feeling sufficiently. Despite that, it triggered enough thoughts to keep me busy for quite some time.

Also, there are two points on the technical side that drop this book from four stars to three:

- There were some moments that felt like the editing had slipped up. One reviewer mentioned the beginning of Chapter 12 especially. I read that sentence at least ten times before moving on, unable to understand it. It really does look like a section Mieville forgot to fill out.

- On the Kindle version I have, the accented 'z' in Beszel comes out too large and pixelated. It's a bit ugly and distracting, and unfortunately it's used a lot throughout the narrative.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A nice change of pace for Mieville., 23 Jun 2011
By 
plot hound (Dublin, Ireland) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The City & The City (Paperback)
This is very different from Mieville's other books, it is a simply detective story with a twist.

The detective story part is fairly straight forward, a woman is found dead and Borlú has to find out why with added political complications.

Where it gets weird is that there are 2 cities overlapping, certain sections of ground claimed by each and some shared and everyone trained to pretend they don't overlap.

This is a very odd idea and adds some unexpected twists to plot.

Borlú is the only character given any depth and in many ways he is the standard city detective character desperate to solve the crime, likeable and interesting. The other characters are all pretty standard background, forgettable.

The pace is good and we follow the case things get quicker and quicker and we are gradually given more information on the set-up in the cities and how they work.

The plot is convoluted and keeps you guessing, there are plenty of twists and turns.

The ending is good, not too clean but resolves all the main issues.

This doesn't have the same depth as some of his other books but it is a much easier read.
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