Deep in the research wing of the Natural History Museum is a prize specimen, something that comes along much less often than once in a lifetime: a perfect, and perfectly preserved, giant squid. But what does it mean when the creature suddenly and impossibly disappears?
For curator Billy Harrow it's the start of a headlong pitch into a London of warring cults, surreal magic, apostates and assassins. It might just be that the creature he's been preserving is more than a biological rarity: there are those who are sure it's a god. A god that someone is hoping will end the world.
A review I like:
Don't know what to think of it. It's like a modern day Anubis Gates, on acid
Just ordered it
Aglithophile and conniptionist and spectacular moonbow beholder 16Jul11
Don't know what to think of it. It's like a modern day Anubis Gates, on acid
Heh...One of the books I constantly forget about, then when someone mentions it remember thinking it was great, have to get a copy and see if it still is.
Just ordered some Meiville on Watcher recommendations...better be good, peeps.
[spoiler]Sig-man, Libtard, Stupid piece of shit. change your text color to brown. Mr. Reliable, bullshit-slinging liarFucker-user.[/spoiler] the difference between evidence and sources: whether they come from the horse's mouth or a horse's ass. "Most people are other people. Their thoughts are someone else's opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation." the hyperbole is a beauty...for we are then allowed to say a little more than the truth...and language is more efficient when it goes beyond reality than when it stops short of it.
I'm disappointed so far. It's just not grabbing me the way his other books did. Spoiler
When I read Perdido Street Station for the first time, I thought it was pretty obvious that New Crobuzon was based on London. Kraken reads like some sort of idea list that CM had for when he was writing Perdido. Or like a first book that he thought wasn't good enough, but Perdido sprung from its ashes. There's just too many groups and organisation with dodgy justifications for existence. The characters are Mieville-wierd, but that's all - I'm feeling nothing for the good guys and the bad guys are tame. It does remind me a bit of a modern-day Anubis Gates, but imo vastly inferior.
Aglithophile and conniptionist and spectacular moonbow beholder 16Jul11
I just finished Kraken. I had these responses in mind a little when I started, so was surprised to find I enjoyed it a lot. It's a very fun book, with a lot of inventive weirdness, unashamedly full of magic and gods and cults &c without trying to be plausible (metaphor as magic - it only has to sort of make sense, on a symbolic level). It's about a hidden London, much like his YA UnLunDun, but one on the surface, in plain sight. That same creativity applied to an adult work.