China
Mieville entered the fiction scene quietly.
King Rat was an unconventional
horror novel that gained some recognition through award nominations, but little
success commercially. Perdido Street Station the book that put
Mieville’s name on the map, readers who could overlook its lexical diarrhea
discovered a unique story of hitherto unknown proportions in genre—no mean feat
in the 21st century. Bas-Lag a fantastical,
fertile setting, Mieville penned two additional novels in the milieu, the
storylines gaining integrity with every step.
(Even if Iron Council was
messily executed, its ideas transcend the simplicity of Perdido’s aim to be “a good monster story”.) The follow up to Bas-Lag, The City & the City (2009), saw
increased focus on social/political ideals, but was bundled with tight prose
and a refined structure to produce Mieville’s most accomplished novel to
date. It’s thus with Kraken (2010), the next novel, a regression
can be observed, and if not regression, at least reversion.
Hearkening
back to the urban horror/fantasy of King
Rat, Kraken is a unique romp
through London that swims with undersea monsters and cults. Mieville (thankfully) abandoning his ‘why use one word when twenty esoteric will
do’ approach to storytelling, Kraken
is a focused plot that works its way lucidly, patiently, one paranormally Weird
step at a time through arcane magic, supernatural gangsters, and of course, the
mother of all giant squids in Mother London. Taking a seemingly innocuous
natural history museum and turning it on its fantastic head, all sorts of the
esoteric emerge from the woodwork as the apocalypse descends on the kidnapped
cephalopod.
Kraken is great fun.
One can see Mieville relaxing, just telling the story coming to his
mind. But it’s ideologically empty. Where The City & the City possesses layers examining how the urban landscape is
perceived by the individual and culture, Kraken
is a load of ideas that work for the story’s purpose, but for its purpose alone. There is little that transcends the tale the
reader can sink their conceptual teeth into.
The last third of the novel dragging its feet, the initial setup
weighing it down, all the fluffiness comes to a head with a simple Darwinsim
vs. creationism climax that is sub-par compared to the wealth of knowledge
Mieville displays in his public appearances.
Something noticeably lacking compared to the thematic and artistic
presentations of Iron Council, The City & the City, and to some
degree The Scar, Kraken is regression to ‘good monster story’.
Kraken is a ripping yarn that shows how far Mieville’s
storytelling talents have come. The
prose crackling, the sense of the urban paranormal wide-angle, and the
characters straight out of a Guy Ritchie film, it’s a unique book for the urban
fantasy elements, voicing, and unpredictable direction of plot. Mieville coming into his craft since the
excesses of Perdido, the novel
remains more style than substance, however.
Its thematic import is significantly limited in scope by
comparison. Kraken is a lark. Readers of
James Blaylock, Tim Powers, and Neil Gaiman will greatly enjoy it, but those
looking for Mieville to take his literary chops to the next level should skip
ahead to the next, Embassytown.
Do you read minds, or are you lurking on Twitter somewhere? I just had a conversation about how I need to read Kraken and Embassytown before I feel adequately Mievilled.
ReplyDeleteGreat to see that you're reading Signal to Noise. You're review will probably decide whether I'll add it to my 2015 list.
Naah, I don't use twitter. Not that I don't like the idea, I'm just all too aware that it would be a major timesuck if I got involved. Any coincidences of content can be chalked up as coincidences, or, the feed I have coming from mic and camera in your laptop... (Cue evil laugh: Hmm ha ha hah!)
DeleteSignal to Noise, yeah, I liked the idea when it came out as Mexico City is such an interesting place, but as it was a debut novel and initial praise is, well, initial praise, I decided to wait a little. The book kept popping back into my mind later, so after a while I just went out and bought it. So far so good. Speaking of which, this keeping up with the year's releases is tough-tough on the wallet... I get a fair amount of ARCs, but the ones I have to buy come at cover price. Ouch.
Regarding your laptop feed, I apologize for the level of conversation you have witnessed. Can't sustain much sophisticated discussion without devolving into childish joking in this household.
ReplyDeleteTwitter is good, as long as it stays off my phone. It's good just to check in, then escape.
Yes, the new releases are pricey. I did it all in December last year, and I've never spent so much on books in one month. Good people on the other end of those purchases, though.