King Rat 120
King Rat | |
author | China Mieville |
pages | 320 |
publisher | Tor Books |
rating | 8 |
reviewer | CrankyFool |
ISBN | 0312890729 |
summary | Saul Garamond is blamed for his father's death, broken out of jail, and finds out his the half-human heir to the rat kingdom and a thousand-year-old conflict. Things go downhill from there. |
King Rat is incredibly similar to Gaiman's American Gods and Neverwhere -- I've purposefully not looked into the chronology of publication so I don't want to assert who was influenced by whom, but some significant elements of Neverwhere -- London as a setting, the critical presence of rats, a malevolent, almost-unkillable foe -- and American Gods -- a protagonist who loses someone dear to him very early in the work (Shadow loses his wife in AG, while Saul loses his father), and who struggles through a new understanding of his role in the world, a new appreciation for the fact he was born for a specific destiny, and a rebellion against his father. Hell, one character actually appears in both American Gods and King Rat.
There's probably a very strong correlation between people who liked American Gods and Neverwhere and people who'll like King Rat. At the same time, King Rat's tone is incredibly different -- it's not a derivative of Gaiman's work as much as it is a close family relation. It's almost totally bereft of humor, unlike Neverwhere, and not quite as awash in a palpable sense of loss as American Gods (especially given Shadow's ongoing relationship with his wife). Unlike the other two books, I found this one a little slow to get into, reading five pages here, ten pages there, until it finally hooked me.
King Rat's story revolves around Saul Garamond, who comes home one night to find that someone has killed his estranged father -- and the police think it's him. Garamond is broken out of prison by the title furtive character, who lost his dominion over the rats in the Hamlin catastrophe, and who introduces himself as Saul's uncle. So yes, the protagonist of King Rat is, in fact, Prince Rat (who is half man and half rat).
The rest of the book is the detailing of the conflict between the Rat, Bird, and Spider people and the pied piper of Hamlin who, in fact, turns out to be quite evil and fond of killing things.
Music is at the core of King Rat, from the basic most powerful talent of the nemesis, to the particular defenses of Saul (since he's a halfling, neither human-snaring music nor rat-snaring music alone could get him), to the interweaving of Saul's story with that of Natasha, a friend of his and a jungle-music DJ. Parts of the book, discussing the music arrangement and the role of bass in the actual communication of emotion to an audience, felt like they might be lost a little on a reader who hasn't been awash in that rhythm in a club. Thankfully for the vast majority of slashdotters, that's not a huge part of the book and even if you've never gone clubbing, held a rhythm, or danced your ass off, you're not likely to be alienated by it.
Mieville decided to end the book and the conflict in a way that felt more ambiguous than it could have been. While I applaud any author who doesn't bow and scrape to the convention that if you have a battle between good and evil, evil must be completely vanquished by the end of the work, I couldn't help feel that Mieville ended the book in such a way at least partially so a sequel could be written, featuring largely the same characters. It left me uneasy and on the verge of feeling a little cheated.
So that's the downside. On the upside, I found Saul's characterization engaging, interesting, and real. Saul is not as good of a man as we all would like to be, but he's probably as good as most of us get to be. Especially in the beginning, he's pretty wretchedly whiny. He's not exceedingly brave, or truthful, or kind. He's just ... a guy, with some special powers due to his parentage, thrust into a reality that is wildly different from his own, and he does his best to adapt to it. Saul's friends, Natasha Fabian and Kay, can't be drawn with as fine of a stroke because the book isn't about them, but they're still interesting and nuanced. Pete, the piper of Hamlin, is rather less complex. He's evil. He's strong. He is, in Jules' immortal terms, a bad motherfucker. With a flute.
Darn decent book, I'd say. If you liked Neverwhere (and can stand urban fantasy that isn't funny), or American Gods (and can stand urban fantasy that isn't set in the U.S.), you owe it to yourself to check it out.
China Mieville's official website was down last time I checked -- you may have more luck finding stuff about him at his unofficial home page.
You can purchase King Rat from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
Previously Read Books? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Previously Read Books? (Score:3, Insightful)
Shit, I wouldn't have cared if I hadn't seen Gaiman's name. I just read (and liked, despite myself) American Gods and was hoping to find something new with the same epic feel and mythological flavor, only with a d
Re:Previously Read Books? (Score:2)
Why should he?
People read reviews by critics because they are interested in their opinion. Most professional reviews are paid advertisements. Amateur ones are shrines. Why should I care what books CrankyFool thinks this book is like if he can't even provide a lucid summary of the book's "hook" in a compelling way to make me interested both reading his review and possibly obtaining the book to read?
CrankyFool's review reads like a high school book report, which it probably is. CrankyFool could have sav
Re:Previously Read Books? (Score:4, Insightful)
He bit off more than he could chew. It's very hard to fit such an exestential concept into a story, without the climax (and denoument) being embarassing. Think of the movie Contact, and then consider how much better it would have been with the 'alien encounter' climax written out.
Gaiman is an excellent writer; he just needs a little mental distance from graphic novel plotting, IMHO.
I suggest Gene Wolfe. He creates a tone and atmosphere similar to Gaiman's, with more distance from the present world. Wolfe is very skillful with the written word. The vocabulary and descriptions are amazing.
===========
Re:Previously Read Books? (Score:4, Insightful)
Worst thing about the film adaptation was that it turned Sagan's theme upside down. In the book, a level headed scientist who bucks religious nonsense and uses human creativity to discover the underlying truth of the universe and its creation. In the film, a level headed scientist is COURTED by religious nonsense and in the end discovers that science isn't everything. In short, they de-Sagan'd it. The outrage is indescribable...should have sent a poet...
Re:Previously Read Books? (Score:3, Interesting)
Also, at the end, it was not science itself that was flawed, but the people in charge of it. That kind of reminds me of why religions suck in the real world...and perhaps that was the point.
But yes, the book was many times be
Re:Previously Read Books? (Score:1)
American Gods (Score:2)
Re:American Gods (Score:2)
Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency was a recycle of an half-filmed Dr. Who episode, which shoe-horned in a detective character who was more or less the same archetype as FBI Special Agent Cooper from David Lynch's Twin Peaks.
The Long Dark Tea-Time Of the Soul was an even more confused, muddled, and cobbled-together sequel to that book. I'm pretty sure he was using the Dirk G
Re:American Gods (Score:2)
Gaiman really steals more from Pratchett than he does from Ada
Re:American Gods (Score:2)
Which shows that a lot of "Brits" [sic] don't really understand America at all. None of us are tied to a particular piece of dirt, that's true. Even for somebody like me, who has family ties going back to the colonial days, we are only talking about roughly 400 years of history here, which is nothing compared to the age of many important European citi
Re:American Gods (Score:2)
As for Sandman living up to the hype...it does, at times. I'm recollecting the whole 75 issue run mostly as a matter of principle, and there's some brilliance there, but there's also a lot of Vertigo Comics masturbation. Vertigo was really the first attempt by a major publisher to reach a new, artsier a
Re:American Gods (Score:1)
By knowing that they collaborated on the novel Good Omens, I expect.
Authors overusing themes... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Authors overusing themes... (Score:1)
While the settings and actors change the stories have remained a well trodden field since the days of sitting around the tribal fire listening to the elders tell tales.
People are boring.
KFG
Re:Authors overusing themes... (Score:2)
Re:Authors overusing themes... (Score:1)
Oh they're around, and then some!
Get your mitts on anything by Haruki Murakami, Jeff Noon, and Jim Dodge for a refreshingly unconventional contemporary read.
Somewhat older (although that's hardly important), and well worth checking out are, Kobo Abe, Italo Cavino, Borges, Tom Robbins, Alain Robbe-Grillet..
there's some fantastic stuff out there
Re:Authors overusing themes... (Score:2)
I humbly suggest you check out Christopher Buckly. Little Green Men is a comical political thriller which shines a glaring light on the culture of alien abductees and Sunday morning Washington TV journalists. Thank You For Smoking is a painfully funny novel in which the protagonist is a paid lobbiest for a tobacco "research institute" which is actually a
Re:Authors overusing themes... (Score:2)
I waren't insightful or nothing, but I waren't a troll neither.
Gaiman... (Score:4, Interesting)
Oh well, YMMV.
Re:Gaiman... (Score:2)
About American Gods.... (Score:1)
Re:Gaiman... (Score:3, Interesting)
I'd say it was better than some of Pratchett's earlier work, and not as good as most of Pratchett's later work. I like Good Omens a lot (I've read it a couple of times), but Pratchett's books about the city watch are more consistently interesting and better written. Night Watch is a fine example of this, as is the recently reprinted (in the US) Guards! Guards!.
Re:Gaiman... (Score:3, Funny)
Now excuse me while I spank the monkey to a cartoon show. Er, I mean, anime.
Ummm Hello (Score:3, Insightful)
A billion books probably start off with the protagonist losing a loved one. Hello.
Re:Ummm Hello (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Ummm Hello (Score:3, Interesting)
The fish out of water is one of the most common storytelling tropes. One of the first things the author has to do is remove the water.
Great... another SCO story? (Score:5, Funny)
Also check out Tim Powers (Score:5, Interesting)
I will say this though - many of the books have a similar, almost formulaic feel to the main character. The details may be different, but the fact that they just lost someone they love in the begining of the novel tends to be eirily similar. That said, its not always there, and the details of whom, how and why are always very different.
Tim Powers (Score:2)
I can't praise Powers enough. And yet, the usual scifi/fantasy geeks here on Slashdot and elsewhere, the kind who devours Gaiman, Stephenson, Heinlein, Adams etc., don't seem to be aware of Powers. Are his books hard to find? Badly marketed? Not cool enough?
If anyone can do the disturbing, visceral, gothic and above all surreal magical realism, it is Powers. Gaiman is a good, inventive author. Occasionally in American Gods there are brief flashes of storytelling wh
Check out Tim Powers (Score:1)
Re:Also check out Tim Powers (Score:1)
Home page (Score:5, Informative)
I read the other book (Perdido Street Station) a week ago. I though it was pretty good.
(although perhaps with an overdose of unconnected storylines)
There's a sequel to that one out too, called The Scar [panmacmillan.com]
Re:Home page (Score:2)
Not quite--The Scar is set after Perdido Street Station, but it's about different characters in a different part of the same world, and it goes into a lot more detail about that world. Perdido was almost entirely about the city it was set in; The Scar talks about other places and explains a bit about why the world is so... weird. One of the characters in Perdido is mentioned in The Scar for about half a page, but that's it. It's certa
Re:Not to be confused with (Score:1)
The only similarities are that there are Japanese characters and both are by the same author.
Re:Not to be confused with (Score:2)
Re:Not to be confused with (Score:2)
The whole series (Shogun -> Tai-Pan -> Gai-Jin -> King Rat -> Noble House -> Whirlwind) follows a story l
Re:Not to be confused with (Score:2)
Re:Not to be confused with (Score:3, Funny)
I think 'Anti-Hero' got a new meaning with that book.
But I have had a hard time explaining the whole thing to my wife, she usually stops me in the middle with an "oh, gross".
Where's the obligitory... (Score:2)
CB
Symptomatic of historical revisionism (Score:5, Insightful)
At least with Gaiman's "American Gods" the author was recasting mythological figures in a new light, and while criminally negligent in his characterizations, it was nevertheless a fascinating read.
In this book, however, I find much to despise, and it reminds me of how Julie Taymor butchered Shakespeare's "Titus" by recasting it in a pseudo-fascist-modern period. Or how "Cold Mountain" romanticizes the South and ignores the issue of slavery. Or how Gibson's "Braveheart" becomes an anti-English Scottish propaganda piece, though it has more holes than a pound of Swiss cheese. Can't so-called "artists" leave well enough alone? The same happens here -- the historical town of Hameln is twisted into Hamlin, and an allegory of emigration become an epic battle of good versus evil.
To wit: Hameln is a town in Lower Saxony, Niedersachsen, in Germany. In the Middle Ages thousands of German emigrants, enticed by tax breaks and offers of free land, made the thousand mile trek to Transylvania, then more or less a part of the kingdom of Hungary. Of course, it was the skilled classes that left, and the young, leaving behind the old and the weak.
Thus an exciting and influential event in the course of European history is manipulated for the sake of low-class genre fiction by a Gaiman-imitator.
I think I'll stick with Turtledove.
What? (Titus) (Score:4, Insightful)
Perhaps you should watch it again with an open mind? This time try going past the first few minutes, okay?
which one did they move? (Score:2, Insightful)
they must have gone the narvik route then. I think Transylvania and Germany are a little closer together than that
Re:Symptomatic of historical revisionism (Score:1)
"My attitude to this sort of stuff is entirely piratical and philistine. I plunder myths or whatever but without any respect for their symbolic heritage." -- China Meiville
I seriously doubt that he has no issues doing the same for historical events.
The man steals and other people's cultures and histories, takes them completely out of context, and uses them for his own ends...and I think that that is totally in keeping with the way he writes...
full quote is
Re:Symptomatic of historical revisionism (Score:1)
Turtledove does rule, though...
Re:Symptomatic of historical revisionism (Score:1)
What if you didn't like American Gods? (Score:3, Insightful)
So, the question is, if you loved Neverwhere, but American Gods left a bad taste in your mouth, how will King Rat fare?
Re:What if you didn't like American Gods? (Score:1)
It's one of the better pieces of fantasy I've read in recent ye
Re:What if you didn't like American Gods? (Score:1)
We're more urban now. Mirkwood (aka the Black Forest) has been cut down. All that's across the Atlantic is Europe or the Americas (most of us forget about Africa). China isn't exotic and magical. It's the world's workshop.
So where does that leave Faerie? It has to be somewhere familiar enough to identify with bu
Question on the Pantheon (Score:1)
Borribles (Score:5, Interesting)
I assert they were all influenced by Michael de Larrabeiti's The Borribles [theborribles.co.uk], which was published in 1976. I'm probably wrong -- it's been years since I read this, and I was quite young when I did -- but I vividly remember London and rats. The Borribles was the first of a trilogy, all of which have been out of print for a long while; however, while Googling for the link, above, I made the happy discovery that they have been reissued (ISBN: 0330490850).
Re:Borribles (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Borribles (Score:1)
Perdido Street Station (Score:5, Informative)
Right now, I'm reading a bunch of Elmore Leonard. Does anyone write better dialogue than this guy? No. His books are taut and practically impossible to put down - unlike Mieville's, which I struggled mightily to finish.
Re:Perdido Street Station (Score:1)
I struggled through the first half of PSS and kept with it mainly because I felt that I was supposed to like it. The storyline eventually tightened up, and the last half was an engaging read.
Having read Neverwhere and American Gods, I can definitely see the similarities, but I would also toss in
Re:Perdido Street Station (Score:2)
Of course, that's just my opinion - if you enjoyed it, then that's excellent, and money well spent.
More in this vein (Score:4, Interesting)
If you like King Rat you'll probably enjoy his other books (Perdido Street Station and The Scar) and books by authors like...
Tim Powers, Jeff Vandermeer, Ian MacLeod, Neil Gaiman, Johnathan Carroll, Alan Moore, M. John Harrison, Forrest Aguirre, Jeffrey Ford, and Jasper Fforde. Mary Gentle, Gene Wolfe, and Borges will almost certainly also appeal.
And of course, if you have $200 just lying around doing nothing you will want to get a copy of the Codex Serafinianus just to squick yourself.
The Tain (Score:2)
Who inserts the affiliate links? (Score:2)
Hmm... (Score:1)
Re:Hmm... (Score:3, Interesting)
Perdido Street Station was weird, imaginative, and thought-provoking, but ultimately (IMHO) sort of boring and pointless. I recommend it, but I didn't feel that it lived up to the hype. I am looking forward to reading The Scar.
I loved 85% of American Gods. Unfortunately, the 15% that I didn't like was the resolution. Yes, it had one. Yes, I understood it. For some reason I just wasn't satisfied by it, for reasons I can't quite put my finger on. I wasn't bored by it (the book
I'm sorry.... (Score:1, Redundant)
That's NOT incredible... (Score:3, Insightful)
The book is similar to Neverwhere? Good. Thanks for the info, but pardon me if my eyes don't exactly widen with amazement.
Mieville's writing style is similar to Gaiman's but different? Fine. It's nice to know, but exactly leave me choking on my sandwich.
Ahh...the scent of freshly picked nits!
It's OK, but... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:It's OK, but... (Score:2)
As for the original topic, Read King Rat about 4 years ago and REALLY liked it. I think the original reviewer needs to read more urban fantasy
Re:It's OK, but... (Score:2)
Not to be confused with... (Score:1)
Charles de Lint - if you liked Neverwhere (Score:2)
Neverwhere however was a most excellent book and reminded of author Charles de Lint. In his books (of which there are many) he writes about a town (canadian if I remember right) in which it seems the line between the fairy world and ours is a bit blurred. Many of the stories involve everyday normal humans c
Re:Charles de Lint - if you liked Neverwhere (Score:2)
If you want a book in which "it seems the line between the fairy world and ours is a bit blurred. Many of the stories involve everyday normal humans coming into their first contact with the little bit of magic all around them. Some believe immediately while others take convincing. Many characters recur through the books and short stories and eventually you may find yourself wrapped up into his little world.", I would highly recommend Sylvie and Bruno [worldwideschool.org] . It is quite a Christian novel, which may be off-putt
Waste of time (Score:1)
but I still vividly remember the feeling that I could have written it myself (given enough time/resources), and as I'm not a professional writer (but am an avid reader) I don't think that is a great impression to have of a book.
Basically I recall that a good portion of the book was cliched, and where it wasn't a direct cliche, it was railing against the obvious cliche in a not very clever way.
The narrative was way too linear.
A
that's a shame because james clavell (Score:2)
i don't read that much but shogun was enough to make me take a year of japanese...
I read Perdido Street Station (Score:2)
I'll probably read King Rat at some point, but I'm certainly waiting for the paperback. Perdido was good, but the author's philosophy and mine are squarely at odds.
-fred
Drum'n'bass (Jungle) music (Score:3, Interesting)
I adore China Mieville's work. I had the pleasure of meeting him at a convention last year. He's a brilliant, interesting guy who writes brilliant, interesting novels.
I'm a bit disappointed that the reviewer downplayed the drum'n'bass aspects of King Rat. It's part of why I love the novel. It's rare that an author can so strongly render a subculture that revolves so much around music. The musical fusion that is drum'n'bass is fascinating, both from a dancing point-of-view and from a headphone music point-of-view. When I read King Rat, I found it exciting that the novel ended up hinging on the interplay between rhythm and melody, and that the importance of rhythm - so often under-appreciated in Western music - was essential to the plot.
I've read all three of Mieville's published novels. I prefer Bas-Lag (the world of Perdido Street Station and The Scar. I believe the forthcoming Iron Council also takes place in Bas-Lag) to the London of King Rat. But I enjoyed the time I spent there in reading the novel and would highly recommend it. And if people who read King Rat take the time to discover drum'n'bass, especially the best stuff from the 90s, then even better.
Sandman Series (Score:1)
Re:Clavell (Score:4, Insightful)
Likewise, the Simpsons is superior to huge amounts of other shows, despite being a cartoon. Then again there are crap cartoons that fall well below the mark. The point is, do not discriminate based on the medium, but rather the individual creations If you do not, you are just as narrow-minded as a troll who only loved comics and cartoons.
Re:Clavell (Score:2)
See how dumb that sounds? If you're a full-grown man who still likes comic books, for Pete's sake come out and admit it. It's not like there's anything wrong with that.
Re:Clavell (Score:2)
Re:Clavell (Score:1)
Only because you got it wrong. As the terms are generally used, The Simpsons is a cartoon. OTOH, Princess Mononoke is animation. All cartoons are animated, not all animation is cartoons.
Similarly with comic books versus graphic novels. Your monthly issue of Batman is a comic book. Arkham Asylum is a graphic novel.
Re:Clavell (Score:2)
In Japan, nearly half of all books are essentially what Americans would call comic books. They include every genre you could find in a bookstore, from bodice-ripping trash romance to murder mysteries. The term they use is "Manga." Also, pretty much all of the best movi
Re:Clavell (Score:2)
Re:Clavell (Score:1)
But then I noted that it was a "graphic novel"
Noted where? I've just re-read the review in case a graphic novel version had been released, and I'd failed to pick that up in first reading the (excellent - good work, feller!) review. The reviewer says nothing about it being a graphic novel - he compares it with work by a graphic novelist.
Not that I feel it matters; I loved King Rat, and would love to read a graphic novel ("whatever that is") version. The ending in particular, no, some of the more...ima
Insightful? How bout Troll? Uninformed? (Score:2)
Aside from that, just because something is presented in a form that you're not used to, doesn't make it any less worthwhile for people to read. Plus, since you don't know what a graphic novel is, you really have no business being on slashdot...next you'll be asking w
Re:Clavell (Score:2, Informative)