I started reading Un
Lun Dun because a colleague from the English Department mentioned
it over lunch table. Colleagues from the English Department seldom
read children's books unless they have children, and this particular
colleague was reading Un Lun Dun with his son with great
enjoyment. I had to confess that I didn't know Mieville had written
children's books, and I went home and bought it. I didn't have any
expectations apart from someone I know well had recommended the book,
and it was written by an author some of whose books I like. I felt
obliged to read to the end to be able to engage in an informed
discussion with my colleague; otherwise I would have stopped after
fifty pages. The moment I saw the word “Chosen” I felt a strong
desire to smash the book against the wall (I was reading on Kindle,
so it wouldn't have been a good idea).
Now, of course the Chosen
business is turned upside down (warning: spoilers!), and generally
the whole book is one big parody. But parody only works as such for
somebody who had read five hundred fantasy novels, and I am not sure Mieville has done so. He acknowledges Neil Gaiman and Norton
Juster, among others, as his sources of inspiration, to which I can
only say: sorry, Mr Mieville, you aren't up to your models (which is
often the case). Where Gaiman and Juster are splendid fireworks, Un Lun Dun is a party cracker. There are far too many things recognisable from
other fantasy texts, but not used creatively – rather randomly
glued together, much like the buildings in Unlondon, made of moil
objects (Moderately Obsolete in London). There are some wonderful
details, such as the torus-shaped Unsun, or the animated milk carton
who develops a devotion for the protagonist. This is typical of the
novel: the least important secondary character is much more lovable
than the protagonist. She is in fact as flat as a pancake. The text
has no room for her to think, feel, be surprised. If she is scared,
the text says she is scared. If she thinks, she thinks aloud. When
she needs to act, she talks to other characters. All tokens of very
old-fashioned children's literature. All directly opposite from the
exquisite narration of Mieville's other books, including those I
don't like. With all the upside-down, fractured, postmodernesque
twists, the plot is painfully predictable. And there is no
heart-breaking farewell in the end.
I am certainly a wrong
reader for this book, fed up with parallel worlds and chosen
children, virtuose wordplay and logical paradoxes. I can imagine that
someone less spoiled, child or adult alike, would enjoy the book and
appreciate exactly the features I find irritating. So don't let my
negative response govern you choice. Read it and see for yourself.
1 comment:
I've clearly fallen behind in keeping up with your blog, but I'm gratified to discover that you, too, were disappointed in Un Lun Dun. I read the first 150 pages, and then gave up on it. It's theoretically interesting, but not very well written. Most people I've talked to have praised the book (for its ideas), but it's one of the few books I have not felt compelled to finish.
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