From the Bookshelf of Fantasy Buddy Reads

Embassytown
by
Start date
May 23, 2018
Finish date
May 30, 2018

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What Members Thought

Silvana
Ever seen a Baroque painting? China Miéville is the Caravaggio of literature. He has his own language, his own aesthetic power that might look too grandiose for some, but also refreshingly profound to others. Embassytown is weird. As weird as his other novels, to be frank. We have a living city, with a bunch of aliens who look like insect-horse-coral-fan things, and with two mouths which simultaneously speak 'Language', a sign-system in which the truth of the world and speech itself are indistin ...more
Ash
China Mieville is one author whose books I wanted to read for the longest time I guess. I bought this book and it sat on my shelf for a long time since I found it intimidating. I knew this would be a difficult read and would require lot of concentration and effort from my side and that was the reason for pushing it down my TBR list. I finally forced myself to pick it up this month and I absolutely loved it. I gave this book 4.5 stars.

I have heard people describe this author's books as being weir
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Kirsten
Apr 03, 2018 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Incredible. Thought provoking. Confusing.

Those are just three words for this book. At first, very hard for me to wrap my head around, but I am SO glad I did.

Once the real action began, it read like a political thriller. The idea that Language could enslave a species was fascinating. The book was alien contact, power of language, and expose of colonial exploitation.

I loved it.
Kevin Xu
Aug 15, 2011 rated it it was ok
I did not find this book all that great. The problem is that the book with more on different languages then anything else. It was not the book that I expected, the unusual Alien encounter.
Sara J. (kefuwa)
Vacillated between a 4 and 5 rating and went with the 5... because I really digged the whole Language and theory of mind thing somehow entwined within a story of enigmatic aliens (that nobody really understood) and living cities with biorigged tech.

I sort of stumbled through the first quarter but was helped because for some strange reason in my head it played out (visually) like a Studio Ghibli film... hmmm... o_O
Ali
Jun 24, 2011 rated it really liked it
I've heard someone else describe this book as an immensely satisfying word puzzle, and in many ways, it is. Once you've "cracked the code" of Mieville's world and the rules of the Hosts' Language, watching the evolution of both is totally engaging. And as much work as the first 100 pages may seem, the last 250 or so fly by. (At least, they did for me.)

This is an incredibly rich sci-fi novel. It could be used to launch discussions on a number of subjects - metaphysics, semiotics, the need for fi
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C.S. Daley
Jul 08, 2011 rated it liked it
Shelves: science-fiction
Would have been higher but a really slow difficult book to read.
Jeffrey
Mar 09, 2011 marked it as to-read
Shelves: science-fiction
Ctgt
Mar 24, 2011 marked it as to-read
Antonis
Jul 15, 2011 marked it as waiting
Shelves: priority-1
VS
Jan 23, 2012 rated it it was amazing
Shelves: science-fiction
Jason Koivu
Jul 29, 2013 marked it as to-read
Navi
Oct 28, 2014 marked it as to-read
Nirkatze
Dec 29, 2015 marked it as to-read
Roc
Jan 03, 2016 marked it as to-read
Jokoloyo
Sep 21, 2016 marked it as to-read  ·  review of another edition
Andrada
Oct 02, 2016 marked it as to-read
Michelle
Mar 03, 2017 marked it as to-read
Melanie Bee
Apr 24, 2017 marked it as to-read
chvang
Jun 15, 2017 marked it as to-read
Shelves: sci-fi
Carrie
Jul 17, 2017 marked it as to-read
Alan
Aug 29, 2017 marked it as to-read
Nika
Jun 14, 2018 marked it as to-read  ·  review of another edition
John
Dec 20, 2018 marked it as to-read
Catharina
Dec 27, 2018 marked it as to-read
Matt
Jan 16, 2019 marked it as to-read
Elizabeth Stultz
Mar 19, 2019 marked it as to-read
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