
Résumé:
Amazon Best of the Month, June 2009: The
city is Beszel, a rundown metropolis on the eastern edge of
Europe. The other city is Ul Qoma, a modern Eastern European
boomtown, despite being a bit of an international pariah.
What the two cities share, and what they don't, is the
deliciously evocative conundrum at the heart of China
Mieville's
The City & The City. Mieville is well known as a
modern fantasist (and urbanist), but from book to book he's
tried on different genres, and here he's fully hard-boiled,
stripping down to a seen-it-all detective's voice that's
wonderfully appropriate for this story of seen and unseen.
His detective is Inspector Tyador Borlu, a cop in Beszel
whose investigation of the murder of a young foreign woman
takes him back and forth across the highly policed border to
Ul Qoma to uncover a crime that threatens the delicate
balance between the cities and, perhaps more so, Borlu's own
dissolving sense of identity. In his tale of two cities,
Mieville creates a world both fantastic and unsettlingly
familiar, whose mysteries don't end with the solution of a
murder. --
Tom Nissley
Starred Review. Better known for New Weird fantasies (
Perdido Street Station, etc.), bestseller
Miéville offers an outstanding take on police
procedurals with this barely speculative novel. Twin southern
European cities Beszel and Ul Qoma coexist in the same
physical location, separated by their citizens' determination
to see only one city at a time. Inspector Tyador Borlú
of the Extreme Crime Squad roams through the intertwined but
separate cultures as he investigates the murder of Mahalia
Geary, who believed that a third city, Orciny, hides in the
blind spots between Beszel and Ul Qoma. As Mahalia's friends
disappear and revolution brews, Tyador is forced to consider
the idea that someone in unseen Orciny is manipulating the
other cities. Through this exaggerated metaphor of
segregation, Miéville skillfully examines the illusions
people embrace to preserve their preferred social realities.
(June)
Amazon.com Review
From Publishers Weekly
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