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Embassytown by China Mieville
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Embassytown (original 2011; edition 2011)

by China Mieville (Author)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingConversations / Mentions
3,4092143,789 (3.88)1 / 326
Avice Benner Cho, a human colonist on a distant planet populated by the Ariekei, sentient beings famed for their unique language, returns to Embassytown after many years of deep space exploration to find she has become a living simile in the Ariekei language even though she cannot speak it, and she is torn by competing loyalties when hostilities erupt between humans and aliens.… (more)
Member:carlypancakes
Title:Embassytown
Authors:China Mieville (Author)
Info:Del Rey (2011), Edition: First Edition, 368 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:
Tags:to-read

Work Information

Embassytown by China Miéville (2011)

  1. 72
    The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell (BeckyJG)
  2. 40
    Babel-17 by Samuel R. Delany (kevinashley)
    kevinashley: Both these books take the relationship between language and thought as central themes. They explore it in different ways but with a similar thoroughness; both really explore just how 'other' alien can be.
  3. 30
    Foreigner by C. J. Cherryh (PhoenixFalls, electronicmemory)
    PhoenixFalls: Cherryh excels in writing really alien aliens and always focuses on the nuances of languages.
  4. 41
    The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin (santhony)
    santhony: Science fiction as seen through the prism of anthropology and sociology.
  5. 41
    Ancillary Justice by Ann Leckie (electronicmemory)
  6. 64
    Hyperion by Dan Simmons (BeckyJG)
  7. 31
    Anathem by Neal Stephenson (bertilak, g33kgrrl)
    bertilak: Miéville has written a philosophical science fiction novel that rocks and is not bloated: Stephenson please take note.
  8. 31
    The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet by David Mitchell (ansate)
  9. 20
    The Book of Strange New Things by Michel Faber (KatyBee)
  10. 20
    Blindsight by Peter Watts (electronicmemory)
  11. 10
    The Dosadi Experiment by Frank Herbert (santhony)
    santhony: Philosophical Science Fiction
  12. 21
    The Dispossessed by Ursula K. Le Guin (sparemethecensor)
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 Name that Book: Found: Help find title of sci-fi book3 unread / 3miatria, October 2021

» See also 326 mentions

English (213)  French (1)  German (1)  All languages (215)
Showing 1-5 of 213 (next | show all)
Wow. As one might expect from China Mieville, this book is not like anything else I've read. It's certainly not an easy read, both conceptually, and linguistically. I've actually had to use the dictionary quite a few times (I'm not a native speaker). But it was well worth the effort. I loved finding out how this world works, and how the Ariekei think. How the humans manage to communicate with them. The Ariekei's biotechnology. There was a part in the second half where the story dragged a bit, a period of makeshift solutions with no deliverance in sight. But I loved the ending. ( )
  zjakkelien | Jan 2, 2024 |
Would have been higher but a really slow difficult book to read. ( )
  cdaley | Nov 2, 2023 |
I think I would've marked this four stars a year ago, but some parts of my brain have been subsequently squashed flat. There's a few too many ideas packed in here, which normally doesn't trouble me, but felt distracting. Wish it were one of a few novels set in the same universe. ( )
  mmparker | Oct 24, 2023 |
When I was young and read Asimov, it was to imagine creatures and ways of living that I never would have thought up myself. Eventually I stopped being surprised, and switched scifi about how societies grow and change, and what was possible there. Embassytown is both, and shows us a species that is both alien enough to be almost possible, and human enough to be the subject of a story.

If your favorite episode of Star Trek TNG was Darmuk, you have taken the first baby step in this wild linguistic adventure. ( )
  zlinkous | Oct 3, 2023 |
I don't know enough about linguistics to know whether the fact that the language breakthrough seemed to be achieved by shouting is accurate or not, but it felt arbitrary. ( )
  IsraOverZero | Sep 23, 2023 |
Showing 1-5 of 213 (next | show all)
Readers who want to delve no further than turning the pages will come away satisfied with "Embassytown," because Mieville's fertile imagination has created a fascinating alien species to go along with plenty of familiar human drama.
 
It is a miracle of a novel, one where Big Ideas cohabitate with Monsters, and neither is lessened by what academic propriety insists must be capital letters.
 
Miéville has a muscular intellect, successfully building a science fictional world around semiotics. For some readers, that will be enough.
 
I don’t hold this will to abstraction against him. Genre writers, and for that matter writers of the well-wrought middlebrow novel, mostly tell the usual stories in the usual way: narrative and character are advanced through conventional action. Miéville is up to something else.
 
In this sense, Embassytown plays out as a novel of metropolitan-colonial conflict, holding out the hope that language might not serve only as a tool of oppression, but be reclaimed as the instrument that makes resistance possible.
 

» Add other authors (8 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Miéville, Chinaprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Drechsler, ArndtCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Hoven, ArnoTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Miller, EdwardCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Uchida, MasayukiTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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Epigraph
"The word must communicate something (other than itself)."
Walter Benjamin, "On Language as such and on the Language of Man"
Dedication
To Jesse
First words
The children of the embassy all saw the boat land.
Quotations
"I don't want to be a simile anymore," I said. "I want to be a metaphor."
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
Disambiguation notice
Publisher's editors
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Canonical DDC/MDS
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Wikipedia in English (2)

Avice Benner Cho, a human colonist on a distant planet populated by the Ariekei, sentient beings famed for their unique language, returns to Embassytown after many years of deep space exploration to find she has become a living simile in the Ariekei language even though she cannot speak it, and she is torn by competing loyalties when hostilities erupt between humans and aliens.

No library descriptions found.

Book description
On a distant planet in the far future, humans and an alien race coexist in a nonviolent but nonetheless uncomfortable arrangement. In general, they don't hurt one another, but they're not necessarily happy to share the city together. It is a marriage of convenience, arranged for economic reasons. But when a new group of humans arrives on the planet, one current citizen—a young woman—begins to realize that things are about to change for the worse.
Haiku summary
The Hosts - who are they?
Avice the simile, all
Ends in social change.
(mclewe)

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