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Jul. 26th, 2014 11:03 amIf nothing else, I probably have Snowpiercer to thank for reminding me about reading Railsea, China Mieville's MOBY DICK ON A TRAIN.
...ok, Moby Dick on many trains. Moby Dick in a land where NO ONE HAS BOATS. There are only trains. And giant whale-moles that prowl the vast expanse of earth over which the trains roll , biting people's legs off. If you think 'but that doesn't make worldbuilding sense!' - yeah, OK, it kind of doesn't, but you roll with it.
I had a hard time getting into Railsea at first, in large part because of Mieville's decision to replace every 'and' with an & sign as part of his internal worldbuilding, which felt incredibly cutesy and jarring to me for about the first hundred pages.
But then we got to the part where the narrator explains that all the greatest moling captains on the great railsea spend their lives pursuing a giant animal, generally one that has bit of an extremity of some kind, and this animal is known as their PHILOSOPHY and they spend the time that they're not obsessively pursuing the animal sitting around in bars expounding on the DEEPER REPRESENTATIVE MEANING OF THEIR PHILOSOPHY, and OK, Mieville, you got me, I can't resist that level of straight-faced meta parody. YOU GOT ME. Captain Genn's Ferret of Unrequitedness! MOCKER-JACK, THE MOLE OF MANY MEANINGS.*
Also, Captain Naphi herself, with her charisma and her obsession and her facility with a spin story, is 100% fascinating and I love her entire terrifying narrative arc.
Captain Naphi is not the protagonist, and the Mocker-Jack strand, while important, is not actually the primary plot of the book; our protagonist is Sham ap Soorap, trainboard doctor's assistant, who gets swept up in a Great Adventure when he accidentally stumbles over evidence of the edge of the world (or at least the world as they know it.) I kind of expected Sham to bore or annoy me, but surprisingly he didn't! I became immensely endeared to him from the moment he rescued a pet daybat and named it Daybe. DAYBE.
And then: train pirates! kidnappings! ancient salvage! giant mole attacks! mutiny! angel trains! wildly playful worldbuilding and prose! a sudden hilarious left turn into 'BY THE WAY CAPITALISM IS THE WORST' because it's China Mieville and he can't resist! a total lack of crushing depression at the end!
This may be my new favorite of Mieville's books? No, actually, it is my favorite, no question. Though I still have Embassytown left.
* Sidenote: Actually I've never read Moby Dick. I know! I will! Someday! But Railsea was still deeply hilarious to me.
...ok, Moby Dick on many trains. Moby Dick in a land where NO ONE HAS BOATS. There are only trains. And giant whale-moles that prowl the vast expanse of earth over which the trains roll , biting people's legs off. If you think 'but that doesn't make worldbuilding sense!' - yeah, OK, it kind of doesn't, but you roll with it.
I had a hard time getting into Railsea at first, in large part because of Mieville's decision to replace every 'and' with an & sign as part of his internal worldbuilding, which felt incredibly cutesy and jarring to me for about the first hundred pages.
But then we got to the part where the narrator explains that all the greatest moling captains on the great railsea spend their lives pursuing a giant animal, generally one that has bit of an extremity of some kind, and this animal is known as their PHILOSOPHY and they spend the time that they're not obsessively pursuing the animal sitting around in bars expounding on the DEEPER REPRESENTATIVE MEANING OF THEIR PHILOSOPHY, and OK, Mieville, you got me, I can't resist that level of straight-faced meta parody. YOU GOT ME. Captain Genn's Ferret of Unrequitedness! MOCKER-JACK, THE MOLE OF MANY MEANINGS.*
Also, Captain Naphi herself, with her charisma and her obsession and her facility with a spin story, is 100% fascinating and I love her entire terrifying narrative arc.
Captain Naphi is not the protagonist, and the Mocker-Jack strand, while important, is not actually the primary plot of the book; our protagonist is Sham ap Soorap, trainboard doctor's assistant, who gets swept up in a Great Adventure when he accidentally stumbles over evidence of the edge of the world (or at least the world as they know it.) I kind of expected Sham to bore or annoy me, but surprisingly he didn't! I became immensely endeared to him from the moment he rescued a pet daybat and named it Daybe. DAYBE.
And then: train pirates! kidnappings! ancient salvage! giant mole attacks! mutiny! angel trains! wildly playful worldbuilding and prose! a sudden hilarious left turn into 'BY THE WAY CAPITALISM IS THE WORST' because it's China Mieville and he can't resist! a total lack of crushing depression at the end!
This may be my new favorite of Mieville's books? No, actually, it is my favorite, no question. Though I still have Embassytown left.
* Sidenote: Actually I've never read Moby Dick. I know! I will! Someday! But Railsea was still deeply hilarious to me.
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Date: 2014-07-26 07:36 pm (UTC)Should we start a reading community for Moby-Dick? It is totally hilarious and great, and I know at least two other people around here who would discuss each chapter with the greatest pleasure. (Its chapters also stand alone unusually well!)
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Date: 2014-07-26 08:00 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2014-07-26 09:40 pm (UTC)Oh man, that would be AWESOME, though I haven't had good luck keeping up with chapter-by-chapter reading comms in the past (I'm bad with bite-size.) But if someone wanted to run it I would totally be willing to give it a try! :D
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Date: 2014-07-26 10:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-07-27 03:03 pm (UTC)(...probably Harrington first though.)
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Date: 2014-07-26 09:57 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-07-26 10:08 pm (UTC)Okay, apparently I am running a Moby-Dick comm. Further updates soon.
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Date: 2014-07-26 10:35 pm (UTC)Wanna mod it with me? :)
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Date: 2014-07-27 07:28 pm (UTC)Yes!
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Date: 2014-07-27 03:42 pm (UTC)After the work of art that is Captain Naphi I almost feel that I am doomed to be disappointed by the actual Moby Dick. But I should probably give it a try one day anyway... far away...
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Date: 2014-07-27 03:46 pm (UTC)SHE'S SO WONDERFUL. I'm so delighted by her ending! Hell yeah, Captain Naphi, FIND SOMEONE'S PHILOSOPHY. Or maybe find ... a whale ...
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Date: 2014-07-28 01:20 am (UTC)... omg I bet Captain Naphi totally finds a whale. Think of ALL THAT SEA just waiting. FULL OF WHALES.
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Date: 2014-07-27 05:30 pm (UTC)I bounced off every single novel of Miéville's and then I got to Railsea; I was so happy.
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Date: 2014-07-27 05:57 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-07-27 07:27 pm (UTC)I had Perdido Street Station (2000) preached to me as an incredible innovation of language and worldbuilding and just a barnstorming new voice in all ways and I read it and I was not overwhelmed, because I had read Angela Carter and Tanith Lee and Mervyn Peake; he was not doing anything that dropped my jaw. I should have loved The Scar (2002) because it was nautical and I just . . . didn't. I heard that Iron Council (2004) had golems and couldn't work up the enthusiasm to try it. I didn't like King Rat (1998), but I know part of that was personal; I bounced very hard off some of the character decisions. Miéville's short and YA fiction also failed to pull me in. I read the first half of Railsea in a bookstore in Providence and bought it from a bookstore in Cambridge as soon as I got home. It was just great.
'fuck it, I came here to preach nihilistic doom and have a good time and I'm all out of nihilistic doom.'
Heee.
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Date: 2014-07-28 06:18 am (UTC)