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Perdido Street Station (New Crobuzon, Bk 1)
Perdido Street Station - New Crobuzon, Bk 1
Author: China Mieville
Beneath the towering bleached ribs of a dead, ancient beast lies New Crobuzon, a squalid city where humans, Re-mades, and arcane races live in perpetual fear of Parliament and its brutal militia. The air and rivers are thick with factory pollutants and the strange effluents of alchemy, and the ghettos contain a vast mix of workers, artists, spie...  more »
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ISBN-13: 9780345443021
ISBN-10: 0345443020
Publication Date: 2/27/2001
Pages: 720
Edition: 1st American ed
Rating:
  • Currently 3.9/5 Stars.
 26

3.9 stars, based on 26 ratings
Publisher: Del Rey
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover
Members Wishing: 5
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

reviewed Perdido Street Station (New Crobuzon, Bk 1) on + 52 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 4
This story is set in a universe similar to ours, yet vastly different. The action takes place in a city-state known as New Crobuzon and the main character is a scientist named Isaac. Isaac lives a fairly normal lifecontent with his girlfriend and his researchuntil a stranger from far away commissions Isaacs scientific mind to solve his problem. Through the course of this new research, Isaac unwittingly releases a monster into New Crobuzon and then the adventure begins.

This book is dark and dirty, and while this is usually a turn-off for me, I enjoyed this book anyway. The language is impressive with a vocabulary bigger than my own and a feeling that no subject is untouchable. The story is long and convoluted and filled with lots of detail. Sometimes something would happen in the story or something would be stated that would make me think, No way, that couldnt happen. But whenever this happened, the author would later divulge more details so everything would make sense again. The world in which this is set is developed with great imagination. The characters are all characters that I could care about, either positively or negatively. The ending of the story is not one that I expected at all. I also liked the way the author didnt tie up all the loose ends, but instead left me wondering what was going to happen.

My only real complaint about the book is, as I said before, that it is very dark and dirty. Its filled with filth and scuzziness. Every type of slime imaginable is featured in this book. But somehow the author is able to make it feel like the dirtiness belongs. The foulness of the characters language and the griminess of the setting makes the story more believable and more real. So it turns out that my complaint isnt a complaint after all. China Miéville has written three other novels, two of which are also set in New Crobuzon although the characters and stories are completely different. Ive yet to read them, but now Ive added them to my list of books to read. These two books are The Scar and Iron Council.
reviewed Perdido Street Station (New Crobuzon, Bk 1) on + 18 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 4
I loved this book...you have to be patient through the first 50 pages or so, because the setting is so alien and dark, but it is sooo worth the effort. Very, very dark place. The characters are beautiful and flawed. The author is not too sentimental to kill a few off along the way. I'll be reading everything else he writes.
amichai avatar reviewed Perdido Street Station (New Crobuzon, Bk 1) on + 368 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
A creative masterwork. The characters are real and sometimes complex, the world depicted is complete to the littlest detail and the story keeps your attention. If you liked American Gods by Neil Gaiman, Mieville's Perdido Street Station is worth a read. Category: adult fantasy, science fiction, contains violence and a little interspecies sex.
MeadowbrookManor avatar reviewed Perdido Street Station (New Crobuzon, Bk 1) on + 28 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Excellent writing from a very interesting Brit - bachelor's in Social Anthropology and a Masters with Distinction from the London School of Economics. Steampunk isn't my favorite genre, but this book kept me riveted. Slakemoths? *shudder*
reviewed Perdido Street Station (New Crobuzon, Bk 1) on + 407 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I have to admit I was nervous about approaching this book again. I had started reading it years ago, but didn't get far. This time, I kept going, and I'm glad I did. Perdido Street Station is a intensely descriptive book filled with so much detail about New Crobuzon and its inhabitants. Woven throughout is the story of Isaac and his quest to help Yagharek fly and what that quest ultimately leads to. It'll be a while before the images of this book leave me and I look forward to reading the next book in the series, The Scar.
Read All 15 Book Reviews of "Perdido Street Station New Crobuzon Bk 1"

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maura853 avatar reviewed Perdido Street Station (New Crobuzon, Bk 1) on + 542 more book reviews
Like Charles Dickens on acid.

OK, this won't be for everyone, but I loved it. Yes, I toyed with the idea of quibbling, with weasel words about how I might have shaved off half a point, because it can be a teeny-tiny bit over-inflated, at 700+ pages. A tad self-indulgent, at times, as the plot vanished in a maelstrom of loving excursions into the crumbling neighbourhoods of New Crobuzon, and sidebars about its weird and wonderful citizens. A little gross, for the delicately-minded ...

But ... worth every page, and every difficult passage, and every time you have to flip back x-pages to remind yourself, who the heck is Jack Half-a-Prayer again? just for the privilege of spending time in the imagination of China Mieville.

Mieville's great talent is spinning narrative gold from the highest of high concept Big Ideas. Every single one of his novels has, at its heart, a Big Idea that make your eyes go crossed when you try to answer that question posed by loving friends and family, "What's it about?" Oh, please. How long do you have?

What I think I love best about Mieville is that he understands the power -- and the proper usage -- of metaphor. Once you hand yourself over to his epic imagination, trusting that you are in safe hands, his narrative wears those metaphors lightly -- it's easy to go for long pages forgetting that New Crobuzon is a twisty, turny fun-house mirror image of London (just look at the map at the beginning of the text, if you doubt me), and that the deeply disturbing and perverted politics of New Crobuzon is a pretty accurate metaphor for what's been going on for years in our millennial world. It's easy to go for long pages marvelling at the residents of New Crobuzon -- the frog-people, the eagle-people, the bug-headed people, the cactus-people -- without stumbling over the question of what they "represent." Until, like one of Mieville's slake-moths, the ideas and imagery worm their ways into your brain, and you are left turning the possibilities over ... and over ... and over ...

Mieville says it himself, putting the words in the mouth of his most interesting (and tragic) creation, Lin, the bug-headed Khepri: "I see clearly as you, clearer. For you it is undifferentiated. In one corner a slum collapsing, in another a new train with pistons shining, in another a gaudy painted lady below a drab and ancient airship ... You must process as one picture. What chaos! Tells you nothing, contradicts itself, changes its story. For me, each tiny part has integrity, each fractionally different from the next, until all variation is accounted for, incrementally, rationally."
reviewed Perdido Street Station (New Crobuzon, Bk 1) on + 1452 more book reviews
This is the third book I've read by this author and the more I read his writing the more I enjoy it. This is the best to date. The imaginative world Mieville created is unreal but quite engaging. The key characters, human and remades, are sensitive, courageous and brave. Even when one tries to picture them, strange as they may be, their personalities are intriguing. I really enjoyed Lin, Isaac, and Yagharek. Lin is the artist whose perfection leads her to the contract creation of her life. Isaac is a brilliant and idealistic scientist who guards his inventions with passion. Yagharek suffers his entire life for one weak action that his culture abhors. Add the four slake moths who terrorize the city while Isaac and his friends seek a way to stop them and the adventure unfolds. This is a fantastic read!
reviewed Perdido Street Station (New Crobuzon, Bk 1) on + 3 more book reviews
One of the most horrific, exquisite and wonderful books I've read. Mieville's setting is utterly original, perfectly evoking the energy and pathos of a metropolis, and I couldn't scrub some of his images off of the inside of my skull if I tried (even with the right...assistance). I'm not generally a fan of horror but this was a five-star read, and not because it tread lightly (which I wouldn't say it did...)
reviewed Perdido Street Station (New Crobuzon, Bk 1) on + 2 more book reviews
Really awesome read. BUT: This book has a dense vocabulary that can sorta overwhelm you when he starts to describe this huge, decaying city he's created. Sometimes as you read, his vocabulary will suddenly spike way up, and you think, wow. Thesaurus junkie. Honestly, I wish Mr. China had been a little less heavy handed with his description. The flow of the story would really have benifitted if he hadn't spent such effort on every little detail.

Anyway, those are the cons. The book is great when it's great and impressive when it's not. Haha.

Also: garuda are the freakin' bomb. I loved them so much.


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