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The City & The City
The City The City
Author: China Mieville
When the body of a murdered woman is found near a skating rink ramp in the extraordinary, decaying city of Beszel, somewhere at the edge of Europe, all the curious spectators knew she was murdered just by looking at the award angles of her body.  It looks like a routine case for Inspector Tyador Borlu of the Extreme Crime Squad.  But a...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780330493109
ISBN-10: 0330493108
Publication Date: 1/1/2009
Pages: 372
Rating:
  • Currently 4.2/5 Stars.
 3

4.2 stars, based on 3 ratings
Publisher: Pan Publishing
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover
Members Wishing: 7
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

ophelia99 avatar reviewed The City & The City on + 2527 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 5
I have read a couple other China Mieville novels. I loved King Rat, I though Un Lun Dun was only so-so, and I just couldn't get through Perido Street Station; so that gives the viewpoint that I rate this novel from. This was a very creative novel in which I though that the creativity was forced on the reader so much that the story itself suffers. It is one of those books that everyone should read, that will generate lots of discussion, and that is an interesting read...unfortunately I did not find it an enjoyable read. It really felt like the story itself (the murder mystery and even the characters) was there as aninconvenience and the point of this book was really to disclose this really creative idea.

Tyador Borlu at the Extreme Crime Division gets pulled into a murder mystery that ends up being about a lot more than a young woman being murdered. His is sucked into a mystery that is bigger than he knows and it is a mystery that will have him challenging all that he believes as a citizen of Beszel. It is written in the style of a detective story; and is much more of a political crime story than a fantasy.

As you can imagine this is a book about two cities. I won't say what the deal with those two cities are because that would spoil the book a bit, but those two cities are very unique. Mieville goes to great ends to make sure that for the first third of the book he never explains to the readers what the deal is with the Beszel and Ul Qoma. He throws lots of strange terminology at you and forces you to just go along for the ride guessing as you go. This is fine, it keeps the reader interested; although it is a bit frustrating to force the reader to go through a lot of work to figure out something that could be briefly stated as part of the story.

After the first 1/3 or so I start to have a problem with this book. About 1/3 of the way through the only thing Mieville does is go through the mechanics of how these two cities work, over and over and over. After assuming we are intelligent readers and can figure things out from the hints given in the first 1/3 of the book; he then does a 180 and assumes that we are stupid and need things explained over and over. It really bothered me.

This come to my second problem with the book. That is that the huge murder story in the beginning seems to be nothing other than a vehicle to talk about the relationship between Beszel and Ul Qoma. In fact as the murder story continues the story turns more into a social commentary than a good mystery story. I agree with the other person who gave this three stars; it seemed like Mieville didn't really care about the mystery and solved it because he knew he should. The whole mystery around the young woman's death was veryminimized.

From me this book gets an okay. It has an extremely interesting and creative premise; so creative and interesting that in an of itself this premise will generate a lot of talk. It is so awesomely creative that everyone should read it just to be exposed to the idea. Unfortunately I don't believe that being creative gives an author license to be lax about the story. At the end of this story it seemed that none of the characters really mattered, even the original mystery of the story didn't matter all that much, the whole deal was about the creative world.

All in all, this is something that you should probably should. Personally I had trouble getting through it. The premise was very intriguing at first, then as the story grew less and less important, I grew bored with the book. It is not a book that has made me like Mieville's writing more. I still have "The Scar" on my shelf to be read and I have heard that is a good book. Hopefully people reading this review will take it as the opinion it is; I realize a lot of people are absolutely loving this book but I was not one of them.
reviewed The City & The City on + 134 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Love Mieville's Bas-Lag trilogy, but this book didn't capture me as much; the writing was good but sparser than his others(probably necessarily due to the subject matter), and while the concept was really interesting I felt it just didn't really live up to its own ideas. I'm not usually a big fan of crime fiction, however, so readers with more of an interest in the genre may enjoy this book more than I did. The story was readable and interesting, I in no way mean to suggest that it wasn't a good book, but I didn't find it captured my imagination in the way the Bas-Lag books did and don't think it merits a second read. The paperback version does contain a very interesting interview with Mieville following the story. I'll be interested to see where he goes with Kraken, his newest release.
CrazyaboutFantasy avatar reviewed The City & The City on + 49 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I like China Mieville, but I hated this book. I wanted to quit reading this book about at the half-way point. I wish I would have. Then, at least, I could have started reading something a little bit more interesting. That was the biggest problem I had with this book. It wasn't interesting; it was boring.
The only thing positive I can say about this book was that it's location was brilliant. Even that though was never completely fleshed out. How did these two cities come to share the same space. Why did everyone who lived in one city pretend (unsee) not to be able to see the people in the other city and used elaborate means to avoid each other. How many times have you accidentally bumped into someone else.
This is essentially a murder mystery. The characters were very 2 dimensional cliches. I was never really able to connect emotionally with any of the characters, and consequently, I couldn't remember the second tier characters when they came back into the story. It also was boring
It was something a China Mieville book has never been for me before. Dull and unremarkable. What a let-down.
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reviewed The City & The City on + 1452 more book reviews
Imaginative approach by a creative author! I liked the characters in the book very much - Inspector Tyador Borlu of the Extreme Crime Squad (ECS) is dedicated to pursuing the murderer(s), working hard to locate whoever is responsible for the death of a young woman in his city. His partner is Corwi, a woman who is devoted to her partner. In the rival city of Ul Quoma he is paired with Dhatt, a policeman as dedicated as he, who uses different methods to obtain results. Together the two investigate the murder, hoping to find who is responsible. The ending is not what I expected but it fits the tale well. This is a good read.
phillysolver avatar reviewed The City & The City on
Unbelievable creation. So unique I was blown away and highly recommend reading this one.
VivaLaVole avatar reviewed The City & The City on + 119 more book reviews
A good, solidly plotted, involving novel. But a bit of a let-down after Meiville's utterly magnificent and wonderfuly intricate Perdido Street Station. In fact, if I had read The City & The City first I might never have bothered reading Perdido Street Station. This appears to be turning into a review now of PSS. Sorry! The City & The City is certainly readable. PSS is brilliant.
althea avatar reviewed The City & The City on + 774 more book reviews
My pick for "best book I've read this year."

The City & the City got nominations for both the World Fantasy Award and the Hugo Award; it won both the Arthur C. Clarke Award and the British Science Fiction Award for 2009. Regardless of this, I will still argue that this is neither a fantasy or a science fiction novel. Rather, it's a noir mystery and a story of political metaphor, taking place in a fictional city.

Although the setting (Besźel and Ul Qoma) is a believable if bizarre additon to the world we know, and is not as vividly alien and grotesque as that of Mieville's New Crobuzon, it is equally original and imaginative. Structurally, I believe that this book is Mieville's best work yet. Content-wise, it is sucessful both on the level of a murder mystery, and as a pointed criticism of artificial political distinctions and the ridiculous lengths that people will go to in order to maintain their 'differences.' Overall, an excellent book.

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