Miévillians discussion

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Three Moments of an Explosion
3 MOMENTS OF AN EXPLOSION
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The Dowager Of Bees and In The Slopes
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Traveller
(last edited Jan 05, 2016 05:06AM)
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in the slopes was another story altogether.
it forces the reader to stretch the imagination to cover the gaps in background information and action, but even so, the action is compelling and the narrative flow is clean.
its deceptively free of fabulism, with its references to technological and scientific evidence. Of course, the idea we have to wrap our minds around is hollow and the refrain pretty darn sobering.


I loved this story. My initial reaction when he took the Four of Chimneys was the same as Sugarface's at the end—"oh no, Kid, oh no, no…". Did I mention how many of Miéville's narrators are jerks? I was sure I knew where this was going, just as Sugarface did. I should know better. I suspect China might just give up when he gets that predictable.
Of course, one reason I loved this one is that I think I understood it!
(view spoiler)

Thank you also for the extra info on poker and (not) showing. As I said, don't know nothin' about that aspect of the game. :)

Being it is CM, I suppose cars can pitch tents ... ;)

"In the slopes" was interesting, but it didn't go anywhere. It seems almost like a pitch for a novel.



Yeah, "In the Slopes" left me wanting. You might not want the archeological in-fighting, but that's been the whole history of the field! And it's clearly still going on—you just have to read the background pieces about Homo floresiensis and Homo naledi to see it.

Probably doesn't matter, does it? Weren't they all planted there by God as a test in our faith of a young earth?!

In the first scene, Joy wins with a hidden suit and people owe her a favor, so that seems like they're forfeiting to her for losing.
In the second scene, Belinda wins with the hidden suit, but then it seems she owes the other player a forfeit. Maybe I'm just misreading it, but it talks about how tense she seems and she says stuff like "that's not that bad".
These two contradicting one another don't make sense to me, and it makes interpreting the ending tough. The ending again makes it seem like the loser owes the winner a forfeit, since the protagonist keeps asking "what's the forfeit", but it's unclear because of the phrasing. It's referred to as a "winner's forfeit" by the judge, which makes it sound like the winner has to forfeit
Does anyone have any insight?
