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Contents

   



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1 Plot  





2 Characters  





3 Reception  





4 References  





5 External links  














Kraken (novel)






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Kraken
First edition
AuthorChina Miéville
Cover artistElisa Lazo Valdez
LanguageEnglish
GenreUrban fantasy, Weird fiction
PublisherMacmillan

Publication date

7 May 2010
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Media typePrint (Hardcover)
AwardLocus Award for Best Fantasy Novel (2011)
ISBN0-333-98950-3

Kraken is a 2010 fantasy novel by British author China Miéville. It is published in the UK by Macmillan, and in the US by Del Rey Books. Handed in at the same time as The City & the City, it was chosen to be published at a later date to give the former breathing room. The book bears the subtitle An Anatomy on the title page. It was the winner for the 2011 Locus Award for Best Fantasy Novel.

Miéville has described the book as "a dark comedy about a squid-worshipping cult and the end of the world. It takes the idea of the squid cult very seriously. Part of the appeal of the fantastic is taking ridiculous ideas very seriously and pretending they’re not absurd."[1]

Plot[edit]

An inexplicable event has occurred at the Natural History Museum, London—a forty-foot specimen of giant squid in formalin has disappeared overnight. Additionally, a murder victim is found folded into a glass bottle. Various groups are interested in getting the squid back, including a naive staff member, a secret squad of the London Metropolitan Police, assorted religious cults, and various supernatural and mostly dead criminal elements. The wondrous squid represents deity to the Church of Kraken Almighty. Did they liberate their god, or could it have been stolen by a rival cult? The only thing that all agree upon is that the fate of this embalmed kraken is intimately tied to the End of the World.

Characters[edit]

Reception[edit]

Kraken won the 2011 Locus Award for Best Fantasy Novel.[2]

In a review for The Guardian, Damien G Walter says: "Kraken seems as though Miéville is taking a step back from the artistic agenda that has previously informed his writing, perhaps to flex creative muscles grown stiff in the constraining seriousness of the New Weird. And Miéville sets about his dark comedy with almost unseemly relish."[3] Similarly, in a review originally published in The Sydney Morning Herald, James Bradley observes, "[Krakenis] Miéville’s most stylistically exuberant work to date, not just gloriously adjectival ... but wildly creative as well, marrying a marvellous ear for the rhythms of London English to the cracked semi-scientific jargon of occult literature."[4]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Williams, Andrew (3 June 2010). "China Miéville: My new book takes the idea of the squid cult very seriously". Metro. Retrieved 3 June 2010.
  • ^ Locus Awards 2011 Winners, at Locus; published June 25, 2011; retrieved December 6, 2017
  • ^ Walter, Damien G (15 May 2010). "Kraken by China Miéville". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 June 2010.
  • ^ Bradley, James (2 October 2010). "Kraken by China Miéville". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
  • External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Kraken_(novel)&oldid=1220183139"

    Categories: 
    2010 British novels
    Books about cephalopods
    Kraken in popular culture
    Macmillan Publishers books
    Novels about museums
    Novels by China Miéville
    Novels set in London
    Urban fantasy novels
    Weird fiction novels
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles with short description
    Short description matches Wikidata
    Use dmy dates from April 2022
     



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