| The City & The City |  | Author: China Mieville Publisher: Pan Category: Book
List Price: £7.99 Buy New: £4.31 as of 19/5/2012 19:33 BST details You Save: £3.68 (46%)
New (39) Used (13) from £1.38
Seller: Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 4,917
Languages: English (Unknown), English (Original Language), English (Published) Media: Paperback Pages: 500 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0 Dimensions (in): 0 x 0 x 0
ISBN: 033053419X EAN: 9780330534192 ASIN: 033053419X
Publication Date: May 6, 2011 Shipping: Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.co.uk Review Certain writers absolutely defy categorisation – and China Miéville is most definitely of that rarefied company. His prose is exhilarating, poetic, coruscating with ideas and atmosphere – and it has enhanced a body of work that has almost no parallels in modern writing. Heretofore, if Miéville has brushed shoulders with any identifiable genres, they are those of fantasy and science fiction – which makes his remarkable new book, The City and The City, such a surprise. The author’s publishers compare this novel to Philip K Dick, Raymond Chandler and 1984 – which at least gives a series of corollaries for this book, however tentative. There are elements here of the crime thriller, but very much refracted through Miéville’s highly individual imagination.The body of a murdered woman is discovered in the remarkable, crumbling European city of Besźel. Such a crime is par for the course for Inspector Tyador Borlú, who is the premier talent of the Extreme Crime Squad – until his investigations uncover evidence that bizarre and terrifying forces are at work – and soon both he and those around him will be in considerable peril. He must undertake an odyssey, a journey across borders both physical and psychical, to the city which is both a complement and rival to his own, that of Ul Qoma. Like all of China Miéville’s work, The City and The City will not be to everyone’s taste – the very individuality of the prose and the surrealistic inventiveness will not attract those preferring more prosaic fare. But for readers who hanker after untrammelled imagination – and look for literary fare unlike anything they have read before (even, it has to be said, by Miéville himself), then this is a journey to be undertaken. But with caution, perhaps… --Barry Forshaw
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