Things have changed in the genre. It used to be that writers cut their teeth
and honed their style in the short fiction world of magazines and quarterlies,
collections and anthologies, slowly climbing the ladder of success to
novel-hood. But today, any writer with a good idea and manuscript in hand (and
a little good luck) can get published.
Iain Banks, for example, has twenty-seven novels published, but only one
short story collection. China Mieville
is another writer whose initial successes were novel- rather than short
fiction-based. It took seven years from
the appearance of his first novel, 1998’s King
Rat, to the time his first collection was published, 2005—and it remains
his only collection published as of 2013.
Containing dark, occasionally artistic, often florid stories of horror,
fantasy, and things marginally between, Looking
for Jake and Other Stories is collection and is the subject of this
review. The following are short
commentaries on the individual selections:
“Looking for Jake” is Mieville’s
second-ever published work. Epistolary
in form and edgily atmospheric in tone, the narrator describes London after a
strange apocalypse. Monsters and other
horrors forever hovering at the edges of empty streets and macabre scenes,
Mieville is obviously attempting a moody, artistic piece regarding the
evolution of society. Lexically
exuberant to say the least (very similar to Perdido Street Station in style), it’s a story to ruminate upon, nothing clear-cut,
and one of the best in the collection.
An allusive story of a Gulf War veteran,
“Foundation” finds Mieville choosing sides politically—something his novels
have difficulty doing. A short but solid
piece that uses metaphor nicely.
A joint effort with Emma Bircham and Max
Schaefer, “The Ball Room” is the most straight-forward horror story of the
collection. Narrated by a security guard
at a ready-to-assemble furniture store, he describes the mysterious occurrences
in the ball room of the children’s playroom at the store.
A piece of meta-fiction, Mieville himself
reviews meeting minutes for a political club he belongs to in “Reports of
Certain Events in London”. Slightly pretentious, Mieville’s relationship with
London is nevertheless artfully expressed via the minutes. The evolution of the city described via the strange
behavior of the roads, it too is one of the best pieces in the collection.
Obviously an experimental work,
“Familiar” is the story of a witch who accidentally creates a familiar he’s
unable to dispose of. A distant echo of Frankenstein, Mieville’s story is florid
grotesqueness that contains the overwrought verbosity of Perdido Street Station style-wise, and is Evil Dead in content. Those
who like a dense effusion of descriptions in a tale of the macabre will enjoy
this short. See the following: “The familiar could not retreat, even
bleeding with arms, legs gone, with eyes crushed and leaking, and something
three times its size opening mouths, and shears, and raising flukes that were
shovels. The intoxicant reek of a competitor’s musk forced it to fight… Behind
it, the familiar was motionless. It made
tools of shadows and silence, keeping dark and quiet stitched to it as the
giant tracked its false trail. The
little familiar sent fibres into the ground, to pipework inches below. It connected to the plastic with tentacles
quickly as thick as viscera…”)
Weird for weird’s sake, “Entry Taken
From A Medical Encyclopaedia” is Mieville’s entry in Jeff Vandermeer’s even
weirder Thackeray T. Lambshead’s Pocket
Guide to Eccentric and Discredited Diseases. In the time honored tradition of Alice in Wonderland, it is delightful
nonsense.
Another horror story, “Details” is about
a young boy tasked with taking care of an old woman. Its influences classical, those who enjoy
H.P. Lovecraft will probably enjoy this coming-of age via the strangely
unexplainable.
Borrowing the premise of Bruce Sterlings
“Maneki Neko”, “Go Between” is the story of a man who receives mysterious
secret messages. Out of curiosity, he
follows the instructions contained within and brings objects to the locations
designated. All goes well until he
begins noticing strange things happening at these locations, and decides to dig
a little deeper. The story escalates
nicely, but seems to serve no purpose beyond the story.
Another epistolary, “Different Skies” is
the story of a hopeful elderly man who buys a new stained glass window. Thinking his view upon the world will improve,
when a group of young boys start to taunt and harass him, his optimism takes a
hit, however. Not a memorable story, but
another nice use of metaphor.
In “An End to Hunger”, a brilliant
computer junkie takes on a website he believes offensive. The fight will test his skills and willpower
in this inconsequential story of angst and paranoia.
“'Tis the Season” – A one-off that takes
the commercialism of Christmas to new heights.
Good for a smile, but nothing more.
The only story in the collection that
returns to Bas-Lag, “Jack” is the memoirs of an inmate who knew the mysterious
one-armed Robin Hood from Perdido Street Station named Jack-Half-a-Prayer.
Feeling like material from the cutting room floor, those craving more
from New Crobuzon will probably be disappointed by this spurious bit of
material.
As I listened to the collection on audio
book instead of reading the graphic story, I cannot comment “On the Way to the
Front”.
Saving the best for last, The Tain is also the longest piece in the
collection. Set in a bleak,
post-apocalyptic London, the narrative switches back and forth between a loner
named Sholl and an imago. Brought into
our world against their will through mirrors, imagos are creatures who resemble
humans but do not consider themselves any part of our
existence. Dangerous to humans, Sholl
attempts to discover why they leave him alone, and in fact, intentionally avoid
him. What he finds is not what he—or the
reader—expects.
A philosophically artistic piece, The Tain features Mieville tackling the
challenge of writing an atmospheric narrative a la Mervyn Peake yet in the surreal,
thought-provoking vein of Jorge Luis Borges.
In many ways a precursor to The City & the City, the dichotomy of human/imago is developed and examined
in such a fashion that the reader is forced to look at both sides of
perception. Though the language is
sometimes cumbersome, Mieville successfully creates a realistic vision of a
London in ruin and sympathy for both Sholl and the imago as they try to come to
terms with the situation they are in, the meaning behind it, and how to move
on.
In the end, Looking for Jake and Other Stories is a dark, brooding, and
ultimately an uneven collection given the variation of quality and sense of
purpose to the pieces. Almost entirely
urban fantasy and horror, a couple of the pieces feel more like experimentation
in style rather than serious efforts, while others are run of the mill genre
work. The one ‘story’ set in New
Crobuzon will probably disappoint those looking for fresh material from
Bas-Lag. (“Familiar”, in fact, has a
stronger Bas-Lag feel.) A few pieces, however, are of standout
quality, namely the title story, “Reports of Certain Events in London”, and The Tain. Caveat: given the genre versatility of
Mieville’s oeuvre, which stories the reader will enjoy depends on what
expectations they bring to the table, killjoy fans impossible to dissatisfy.
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