Thadlerian
Riftsound resident
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2005
- Messages
- 989
So, here is a thread in which we can discuss the short stories in Miéville's Looking for Jake - and other stories.
I'll start out with my personal opinions of each of the stories. Needless to say, they all have in common being rather strange and disturbing, every one of them.
Looking for Jake
The title story. I liked it. It has a melancholic feel, and it seems rather diffuse on what's really going on. But there's quite some emotion in it.
Foundation
Utilizing a classic and dear title to tell a story that's certainly not nice at all. Some political motivation. Rather eerie.
The Ball Room
The most down-to-earth of them all, I think. Lots of good observation, and then there's the strange element. I'll have to read it twice, as I didn't really get it. Who was that girl in the ball room at night? Who was that woman? What really happent?
Reports of certain events in London
Very interesting, this one. Feels a little Gaiman-ish. But it is the first of several stories with a "hidden ending", so to speak. We never find out in detail what that incident in Varmin Way (though the picture descriptions give some sort of clues) was. Sometimes a good plot element, other it just feels cheap and annoying.
Familiar
Somehow, very familiar, so to speak. Very reminiscent about that construct subplot in Perdido Street Station. Rather linear, though. The whole substance is based on the inventiveness in the descriptions of the Familiar's actions.
Entry taken from a medical encyclopædia
Short and bizzarre, not really a story.
Details
I liked this one. I feel it works pretty well, both in concept, plot and execution.
Go Between
My personal favourite in the book. Excellent and mysterious, without really touching any supernatural elements. Gleefully paranoid.
Different Skies
Okay, this one verges on scariness. No, I really thought it was frightening. With the light in that window, and the kids "outside". And the ending, open as all the other endings, was nice and ambiguous.
An end to hunger
Mixed feelings about this one. Akyan is most certainly a hilarious character, not least because of his colorful language. But being a story concerning internet in 2000, it is of course very dated, and doesn't feel as strange as Miéville perhaps may have hoped. And the ending was very frustrating. Here I just felt cheated; it was so open that practically anything may have happent. So tell me, you others who have read it, is it possible to extract some more meaning from the rest of the story? What happent to Akyan? What was that big thing he planned to do? Can I find this out by rereading?
Tis the season
I think this one was published for free somewhere. OK story, felt a little demonstrative.
Jack
Return to New Crobuzon. Like Encyclopædia, not really a story, it just floats on descriptions and statements.
On the way to the front
I didn't understand squat of it. Will have to reread a couple of times.
The Tain
The main story, a novella. Will have to reread this one too, had big problems trying to visualise stuff like the imagos and their world.
So what are your opinions?
I'll start out with my personal opinions of each of the stories. Needless to say, they all have in common being rather strange and disturbing, every one of them.
Looking for Jake
The title story. I liked it. It has a melancholic feel, and it seems rather diffuse on what's really going on. But there's quite some emotion in it.
Foundation
Utilizing a classic and dear title to tell a story that's certainly not nice at all. Some political motivation. Rather eerie.
The Ball Room
The most down-to-earth of them all, I think. Lots of good observation, and then there's the strange element. I'll have to read it twice, as I didn't really get it. Who was that girl in the ball room at night? Who was that woman? What really happent?
Reports of certain events in London
Very interesting, this one. Feels a little Gaiman-ish. But it is the first of several stories with a "hidden ending", so to speak. We never find out in detail what that incident in Varmin Way (though the picture descriptions give some sort of clues) was. Sometimes a good plot element, other it just feels cheap and annoying.
Familiar
Somehow, very familiar, so to speak. Very reminiscent about that construct subplot in Perdido Street Station. Rather linear, though. The whole substance is based on the inventiveness in the descriptions of the Familiar's actions.
Entry taken from a medical encyclopædia
Short and bizzarre, not really a story.
Details
I liked this one. I feel it works pretty well, both in concept, plot and execution.
Go Between
My personal favourite in the book. Excellent and mysterious, without really touching any supernatural elements. Gleefully paranoid.
Different Skies
Okay, this one verges on scariness. No, I really thought it was frightening. With the light in that window, and the kids "outside". And the ending, open as all the other endings, was nice and ambiguous.
An end to hunger
Mixed feelings about this one. Akyan is most certainly a hilarious character, not least because of his colorful language. But being a story concerning internet in 2000, it is of course very dated, and doesn't feel as strange as Miéville perhaps may have hoped. And the ending was very frustrating. Here I just felt cheated; it was so open that practically anything may have happent. So tell me, you others who have read it, is it possible to extract some more meaning from the rest of the story? What happent to Akyan? What was that big thing he planned to do? Can I find this out by rereading?
Tis the season
I think this one was published for free somewhere. OK story, felt a little demonstrative.
Jack
Return to New Crobuzon. Like Encyclopædia, not really a story, it just floats on descriptions and statements.
On the way to the front
I didn't understand squat of it. Will have to reread a couple of times.
The Tain
The main story, a novella. Will have to reread this one too, had big problems trying to visualise stuff like the imagos and their world.
So what are your opinions?