Perdido Street Station

, #1

623 pages

Langue : English

Publié 9 novembre 2003 par Del Rey/Ballantine Books.

ISBN :
978-0-345-45940-4
ISBN copié !
Numéro OCLC :
52815141
Goodreads:
68494

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Voir sur Inventaire

(1 critique)

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, spies, junkies, and whores. In New Crobuzon, the unsavory deal is stranger to none—not even to Isaac, a brilliant scientist with a penchant for Crisis Theory.

Isaac has spent a lifetime quietly carrying out his unique research. But when a half-bird, half-human creature known as the Garuda comes to him from afar, Isaac is faced with challenges he has never before fathomed. Though the Garuda's request is scientifically daunting, Isaac is sparked by his own curiosity and an uncanny reverence for this curious stranger.

While Isaac's experiments for the Garuda turn into an …

2 éditions

a publié une critique de Perdido Street Station par China Miéville (New Crobuzon, #1)

Not my Favorite of China Miéville's Novels

I usually rather enjoy Miéville's novels. The City & The City and Kraken are probably two of my favorite fiction novels that I've read this decade.

But for whatever reason, I just could not get into Perdito Sreet Station. The prose was great, like usual. But the characters were off putting. The setting, just an odd collection of weird, half thought ideas. The entire conflict over the moths, just felt contrived.

Sujets

  • Strangers
  • Dystopias
  • Dissenters
  • City and town life
  • Fiction
  • New Weird
  • Fantasy
  • Science-Fiction
  • Horror
  • Urban Fantasy