Tuesday, May 11, 2010
The City & The City - China Mieville
This is a good book - it's an amazing book - but it's a different book. The author doesn't begin the book with any sort of preparation or explanation about the exentricities of the location - which you have to piece together through action and dialog. Since you are dropped into the story, the first 50 or so pages are rough, but once you are past that point it's difficult to put down.
The story takes plce in Beszel (a decaying city) and Ul Quoma (a rich, vibrant city) - 2 fiercely independent cities possibly located in Eastern Europe or Western Asia. These 2 cities occupy the same physical location - sort of. It is truly one large city/state - but with with a jigsaw puzzle of boundaries dividing the two. You could actually be standing on one side of the street in Beszel and the other side of the street - or the house next door - is in Ul Quoma. Residents are trained from birth to "unsee" and in all ways not react to the other city. You were only allowed to be in and experience one city at a time. This is enforced by Breach - the all seeing organization that is necessary to keep social order. Anyone committing breach seems to disappear.
The book begins with a body found in Beszel, murder victim Mahalia Geary, a young archeology student and vocal proponent of a third city of Orciny (which is widely thought of as folklore or an urban legend.) Tyador Borlu, an Inspector with the Extreme Crime Squad, begins to investigate and soon begins to worry that the murder might have actually taken place in Ul Quoma. This means that it should be turned over to Breach - but Breach refuses to take it. This requires a very sensitive investigation and the eventual teaming with his counterpart in Ul Quoma law enforcement. They soon encounter Nationalists (bent on destroying the opposing city) and Unificationists (eager to merge the two cities) and no one seems to want to be cooperative.
This book is more than a novel. It can be seen as a example of how thoroughly authority can maniuplate it's population. It can be seen as a metaphor for segragation - children in the deep south were trained not to associate or even react to children of a different color. It's a commentary on how our political or social class identity is instilled in us from birth. Its a study on perspective. Or it could be an explanation of the isolation of urban life. Or how we can easily screen out our surroundings - how often do you notice the street "homes" of homeless people? It's a cornicopia of topics for the socially conscious to think about. It's subtle, but these thoughts creep into your awareness as you read.
This book is more a 'tale of two cities' than it is a murder mystery. While being a completely brilliant concept, is not always an easy read. The constant explaining become tedious and the slow start while the action waits for you to catch up is almost enough to make you give up. But don't. You will really have something to talk about if you finish.
Friday, May 7, 2010
Deja' Dead - Kathy Reichs
This book starts a little slow - but once you get acclimated to the French (continuous expressions in French and then translated), you are glad you stuck with it. Similar to Patricia Cornwell's Kay Scarpetta, Temperance Brennan solves murders by looking at remains - human remains.
Moving to Quebec from North Carolina to leave a troubled marriage and an alcoholic past, she takes a job as a forensic anthropologiest with the police. Temperance isn't an investigator, but she's stubborn and willing to take on the investiation if she doesn't get cooperation from the police. She puts together conclusions that the police are reluctant to jump to. The story begins with human remains found by grounds workers - remains that had been dismembered and distributed among garbage bags (and it gets more grisley from here.) This plucks a memory for her. As the murders ensue, a pattern immerges to her - again police don't see it.
At the same time, a friend from grad school who is doing some research with street prostitutes becomes terrified of someone she meets on the street. At times I found her secrecy annoying, but Temperance comes to think the two issues might be related.
The plot is engaging and griping, but the descriptions get a bit tedious and some plots just seem contrived. Who would go into an overgrown area at night to investigate - in a thunderstorm, with a bad flashlight? The police also come off looking dumb - not being able to put 2 + 2 together. So an X marked on a map is left to Temperance, our reckless lone crusader, to pursue (enter the thunderstorm and bad flashlight.)
The book seems to foreshadow to one character being the killer, but it turns in another direction and our killer is revealed with no foreshadowing. Completely out of the blue. As a person who likes to solve the murder along with the protagonist, this was annoyinng.
Though not a perfect first book - the story and the character were compelling and I'll go back for more.
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