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[XHU]⇒ Descargar Free Iron Council BasLag China Miéville Books

Iron Council BasLag China Miéville Books



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Download PDF Iron Council BasLag China Miéville Books


Iron Council BasLag China Miéville Books

First and foremost, it should be said that I am a huge fan of China Mieville's work: while I have only read his three Bas-Lag novels (this, and Perdido Street Station and The Scar) I wholly admire his bold, complex narratives and vast imagination. He's been dubbed a member of a writing movement called "The New Weird" (including Jeff Vandermeer, among a few select others), and the title does a pretty adequate job of detailing their most telling trait.

If you've never read Mieville (or have, but not any of the Bas-Lag novels), I think you might do well to start with PERDIDO first. Though the novels can be read on their own, that novel might provide some necessary background to the dissension and unrest in this one.

I wholly admire this work, but I must be honest: I did not like it quite as much as the other Bas-Lag novels. This has much to commend it, but it drags at times, particularly at the beginning and, while one expects a Mieville novel to bounce back and forth between narratives, the narratives were not of equal strength--some are good enough to be their own novels, while some (like the first chapter) were confusing and, well, kind of dull. Additionally, several of the characters were difficult to "know." Judah, a self taught golem wizard, and Ori, a revolutionary who bordered on terrorism, were two main characters who remained out of touch for me. For key, important characters, I didn't understand them as I felt I should have.

But...WOW. What a story. Mieville has more creativity and passion and graphic clarity than SO many other writers it's almost criminal. His stories are so rich, his vivid details so clearly displayed, his action scenes so graphically intense that he draws the breath out of me. While this story is indeed a story of fantasy, wherein some men and women have powers far beyond others, and there are certainly acts and deeds that go well beyond the capabilities of the workaday world, yet Mieville's strength is in creating a world in which such moments are drawn from the same earth that you and I belong to. There is such power in his descriptions that his it all makes an organic sense, a plausibility.

There is SO much that goes on in this tale; the main, titled portion involves a trainful of refugees who choose to escape to a region of the world so feared that NO ONE in his right mind would go there. How they get to the pivotal point that they must escape, and how they manage that escape...well, it's just a great demonstration of an imaginative genius. And the portrayal of the warring state of the city of New Crobuzon--a dismal, wretched metropolis that is not unlike throwing New York City and Calcutta into a blender and setting it on Puree.

The Iron Council itself--the name given the trainful of escapees--is Mieville's clearest expression of his own political belief. Here, socialism is given its fullest expression, and it WORKS: though it is not without its blemishes, the men and women (most of whom were prostitutes) and Remades (criminals of the State whose physiques were grotesquely re-engineered as punishment) all work together for the common good. There is no status here other than chaverim: comrades. The "Iron Council" becomes a myth to all outsiders, but in their own real sense they last for decades as a truly functioning socialist community.

Here, too, Mieville tackles homosexuality...I cannot remember his approaching the subject before in the other Bas-Lag book. It is not handled sensationally, just as an element of plot, to explain and enhance a fuller spectrum of relationships.

ONE ADDITIONAL NOTE, and I cannot stress this enough: if you can, acquire and read whatever Mieville book you possess on a Kindle. One of the most amazing things about this author is his vocabulary, and scarcely a paragraph will transpire without his slipping these darlings in. Whether it's "piceous" or "inspissate" or "byssus" or "dweomer" or any one of a million others you'll be VERY glad all you have to do is tap the word to find out its meaning. I bought my own hardback novel in this particular case and I rued that very fact with every word I stumbled across.

But it's not just show. Mieville's preternatural ability to use unusual, arcane language to express the exact thing he's looking for goes beyond mere descriptive wordplay. No; they go beyond mere narrative and become synthesizers of mood themselves, imparting the scene and the entire novel with a bizarre, almost unfathomable depth of atmosphere. This is true other-ness...this is the novel - be it the New Weird, or fantasy -- as pure escape. It is a word painting using no broad brush, but an exactitude of expression unlike any other.

Read Iron Council BasLag China Miéville Books

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Iron Council BasLag China Miéville Books Reviews


It has taken a few years to finish the Bas-Lag cycle, by design. Perdido Street Station was such a revelation to me that I purposely delayed reading the entire series for as long as possible, assuming the other two books would be as good, or nearly so. I know, I sound like some kind of Mieville acolyte. Eventually, I made it this far, to The Iron Council. Now that I've completed it, I find myself strangely conflicted. There was so much of this book to like. A few new Mievillian creatures to learn about, and a return to New Crobuzon, which I found myself longing for while I read The Scar. But, unfortunately, this story never came together for me. I noticed a lack of cohesion, right from the start, and I could never shake that feeling. The characters, beside Judah, felt one dimensional. Beside the fact that they moved the story forward, they seemed to lack any real identity or purpose. The bulk of the story was compelling enough, although it was uncharacteristically choppy and, at times, meandering. That being said, I'm still pleased to have spent the time snd I look forward to reading almost anything written by China Mieville in the future.
while i do suggest you read this book, i'm not sure if i can suggest that you buy this book for re-reading. like every other bas-lag story we'll experience the amazing world mieville has built. we'll learn more of its history, and meet more of its people. we'll also need to take a step back and realize new crobuzen is how we got here (assuming most of us picked up at perdido street station), and that's where the train stops. outside the city, all rules as we know them are off. in fact, inside the city most rules are rather washed out and flexible affairs. rules like how magic works, or how physics operates, or who's really the aliens when we all take off our masks. this book starts slowly. very, very slowly. painfully slow. i set it down two or three times before really giving it a go. then, the book takes its time getting up and going. but once the train sets off everything else is amazing. the book follows two stories, the train crew and some political activists in new crobuzen which might sound dull but, again, once the story is moving it's an exciting ride. sort of like the climax to "the scar", the endings to both parts of the book will leave you thrilled and bewildered. it'll leave your heart racing and your head scratching. there's a lot that didn't make sense. there's a lot that can't make sense. there's a lot that might make sense but doesn't now, and some that doesn't now but will once you get there. and you should. it's a great book and worth the read. will you ever want to read it again when you get to the ending(s)? try it and see!
First and foremost, it should be said that I am a huge fan of China Mieville's work while I have only read his three Bas-Lag novels (this, and Perdido Street Station and The Scar) I wholly admire his bold, complex narratives and vast imagination. He's been dubbed a member of a writing movement called "The New Weird" (including Jeff Vandermeer, among a few select others), and the title does a pretty adequate job of detailing their most telling trait.

If you've never read Mieville (or have, but not any of the Bas-Lag novels), I think you might do well to start with PERDIDO first. Though the novels can be read on their own, that novel might provide some necessary background to the dissension and unrest in this one.

I wholly admire this work, but I must be honest I did not like it quite as much as the other Bas-Lag novels. This has much to commend it, but it drags at times, particularly at the beginning and, while one expects a Mieville novel to bounce back and forth between narratives, the narratives were not of equal strength--some are good enough to be their own novels, while some (like the first chapter) were confusing and, well, kind of dull. Additionally, several of the characters were difficult to "know." Judah, a self taught golem wizard, and Ori, a revolutionary who bordered on terrorism, were two main characters who remained out of touch for me. For key, important characters, I didn't understand them as I felt I should have.

But...WOW. What a story. Mieville has more creativity and passion and graphic clarity than SO many other writers it's almost criminal. His stories are so rich, his vivid details so clearly displayed, his action scenes so graphically intense that he draws the breath out of me. While this story is indeed a story of fantasy, wherein some men and women have powers far beyond others, and there are certainly acts and deeds that go well beyond the capabilities of the workaday world, yet Mieville's strength is in creating a world in which such moments are drawn from the same earth that you and I belong to. There is such power in his descriptions that his it all makes an organic sense, a plausibility.

There is SO much that goes on in this tale; the main, titled portion involves a trainful of refugees who choose to escape to a region of the world so feared that NO ONE in his right mind would go there. How they get to the pivotal point that they must escape, and how they manage that escape...well, it's just a great demonstration of an imaginative genius. And the portrayal of the warring state of the city of New Crobuzon--a dismal, wretched metropolis that is not unlike throwing New York City and Calcutta into a blender and setting it on Puree.

The Iron Council itself--the name given the trainful of escapees--is Mieville's clearest expression of his own political belief. Here, socialism is given its fullest expression, and it WORKS though it is not without its blemishes, the men and women (most of whom were prostitutes) and Remades (criminals of the State whose physiques were grotesquely re-engineered as punishment) all work together for the common good. There is no status here other than chaverim comrades. The "Iron Council" becomes a myth to all outsiders, but in their own real sense they last for decades as a truly functioning socialist community.

Here, too, Mieville tackles homosexuality...I cannot remember his approaching the subject before in the other Bas-Lag book. It is not handled sensationally, just as an element of plot, to explain and enhance a fuller spectrum of relationships.

ONE ADDITIONAL NOTE, and I cannot stress this enough if you can, acquire and read whatever Mieville book you possess on a . One of the most amazing things about this author is his vocabulary, and scarcely a paragraph will transpire without his slipping these darlings in. Whether it's "piceous" or "inspissate" or "byssus" or "dweomer" or any one of a million others you'll be VERY glad all you have to do is tap the word to find out its meaning. I bought my own hardback novel in this particular case and I rued that very fact with every word I stumbled across.

But it's not just show. Mieville's preternatural ability to use unusual, arcane language to express the exact thing he's looking for goes beyond mere descriptive wordplay. No; they go beyond mere narrative and become synthesizers of mood themselves, imparting the scene and the entire novel with a bizarre, almost unfathomable depth of atmosphere. This is true other-ness...this is the novel - be it the New Weird, or fantasy -- as pure escape. It is a word painting using no broad brush, but an exactitude of expression unlike any other.
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