Fantasy Book Club discussion

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Un Lun Dun
2010 Group Read Discussions
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9/10: Un Lun Dun - Twists and Turns **Spoilers Possible**
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What parts worked? What parts could've been done better?

Mieville has a great imagination, I just wished he spent more time on characterization. Zanna and Deeba were given a few physical descriptions that told us how they were different but other than that I found them pretty interchangeable. I knew someone was going to save the world but by the end it didn’t really matter to me who did the saving.

I agree that Mieville has a great imagination. Did you ever feel like the world was less a cohesive whole, and more just a ramshackled excuse for him to drop every random, interesting idea he'd ever had into the conglomery?

Granted, there were a lot of his creations I enjoyed, like the terrifying giraffes, the utterlings and Obaday for instance. The world just didn’t feel very cohesive, which might have been Mieville’s intent but it just didn’t work well for me. What about you?



Actually, that didn't bug me so much. I agree with the comments that the world could have been a little more cohesive, but the Unlondoners focusing on the Chosen on as opposed to the unchosen one made sense to me. I saw it more as having to do with how society thinks. Even Deeba didn't see herself as the ONE (chosen or otherwise). I saw the belief like all those chosen characters in Hollywood. Does anyone at this point really think a mainstream Hollywood movie's chosen one isn't going to be a white guy or maybe a white girl? I think having even the Unlondoners scribe to the same view was believable.

@Amy: I totally agree. Brokkenbroll went from being my potentially favorite character to one of the worst.

And I'm with you guys about Brokkenbroll. I loved him at first, and then liked him even more when it was revealed he was a bad guy, but he sort of fizzled out in the end. I really expected more of a fight from him.


I am not saying anything bad about young readers, it is simply that the life experiences and development of critical thinking, etc. are at a different level. I remember thinking I was very strong in both areas as a teenager, but re-reading some books as an adult I realized how much I missed because of my age at the time.
Oh, and I saw all of the twists before it happened. Nothing surprised me, except how the gun ultimately worked. Don't know why, but I just kept thinking she would reload with the right "stuff" once it was empty.

As for the age-group - you're quite right in that the age group it's written for might be a bit less critical, and, being less experienced, perhaps, in the cliches and things, be more surprised.
Of course, I also think that the humor of this book relies, at least in part, on being aware of the general outline of a quest story.
That said - I read a lot of YA and Juvenille fiction, and I'm rarely truly surprised by the twistings and turnings of a story, whether YA or adult, unless it's specifically written in one of those "gotcha" type ways (which usually applies to mystery, more than anything else).
But, personally, I don't think it's really the lack of real surprise which made this book fall a bit flat, for me. I'm less a plot-based reader and more a character-oriented one. If I loved the characters, and cared about and empathized with the characters, then I would care a lot less about the predictability of the plot.
But if it's more a plot-based book, then it best be a good plot.
I suppose it could be argued whether this is more a character-oriented book or a plot one. I think I would have to argue for plot, though - at least partially because the characters were so thinly drawn.
Where you surprised by the twists, or did you see them coming? Did you think they were well handled?