Editors Reads
FantasyScience FictionWeird Fiction

China Miéville

British · b. 1972

6 books reviewed Avg rating 4.1 / 5Top rating 4.4 / 5

Hugo Award winner, Arthur C. Clarke Award (three times), British Fantasy Award

China Miéville is a British novelist known for densely imaginative, politically charged weird fiction that defies genre boundaries and rewards patient, intellectually curious readers.

China Miéville arrived in British speculative fiction with Perdido Street Station in 2000 and immediately established himself as something genuinely different: a writer of enormous imaginative ambition, committed to a “weird fiction” tradition that drew as much from Kafka and Lovecraft as from conventional fantasy. Perdido Street Station is set in the teeming city of New Crobuzon, a place of grotesque invention and political oppression. The novel is long, labyrinthine, and at times deliberately uncomfortable, but its world-building is unlike anything else in the genre. Miéville is also an avowed Marxist, and political critique is woven into the fabric of his fiction without ever reducing it to allegory.

The City & The City is a very different kind of book — a crime novel set in two cities that occupy the same physical space but whose citizens are trained from birth to “unsee” each other across the border. Compact and disciplined where Perdido Street Station sprawls, it uses its central concept to examine nationalism, denial, and the social construction of reality. It is probably Miéville’s most accessible work and a good entry point for readers new to him.

Miéville is not for everyone. His prose can be baroque, his narratives deliberately withhold comfort, and his darkness is sometimes unrelenting. But for readers who want speculative fiction that takes ideas seriously and refuses to subordinate vision to commercial readability, he is among the most important writers in the field.

6 Books Reviewed

The Scar book cover
Editor's Pick

The Scar

by China Miéville

4.4

Set in the same world as Perdido Street Station — Bellis Coldwine flees New Crobuzon on a ship that is captured by pirates and brought to Armada, a city built on a raft of lashed-together ships on the open sea.

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Iron Council book cover
Editor's Pick

Iron Council

by China Miéville

4.2

The third Bas-Lag novel — as New Crobuzon convulses with revolution, a man named Cutter travels into the wilderness to find the Iron Council: a perpetual-motion train run by the workers who took it decades ago, still running through the badlands.

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The City & The City book cover

The City & The City

by China Miéville

4.2

Two city-states occupy the same geography but citizens must 'unsee' the other city on pain of intervention by a mysterious force called Breach. A noir detective novel and a meditation on perception.

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Embassytown book cover
Editor's Pick

Embassytown

by China Miéville

4.1

On a distant planet, human colonists live in Embassytown, a city bordering an alien race whose language is unlike any other — they can only speak truth, and only through two voices speaking simultaneously. When a human learns to speak their language, it triggers a catastrophe that could destroy the alien civilization.

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Perdido Street Station book cover
Editor's Pick

Perdido Street Station

by China Miéville

4.1

In the sprawling city of New Crobuzon, scientist Isaac Dan der Grimnebulin is hired to restore a garuda's flight — and inadvertently unleashes nightmare creatures on the city. A landmark of New Weird fiction.

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Kraken book cover

Kraken

by China Miéville

3.9

A giant squid specimen disappears from the Natural History Museum, and Billy Harrow, a cephalopod specialist, is drawn into London's hidden world of apocalyptic cults, squid-worshippers, and magical London underbelly.

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