Railsea
China Miéville
Macmillan
384 pp
I'm grateful to the publisher for sending me an advance copy of this book.
Most
of Miéville’s recent books have worked out the consequences of a big, central
idea – two cities in one place in The City and The City, an alien race learning
to lie in Embassytown, the city of what London rejects in UnLunDun. Railsea follows that with… well, a railsea.
You
might think that the point of a railway is that the trains go in, more or less,
one direction. But imagine the surface
of the Earth, in the far future, being covered in a dense mesh of intersecting
lines, looping back on themselves, switching and splitting and splitting
again. A railsea, on which, (with enough
skill at working the points) you can travel more or less anywhere.
Upon
a sea like that, what might you find?
Island nations, with teeming ports? Ruthless pirates, as merciless as any in Treasure Island? A captain, consumed by the hunt for a great
beast, like Ahab in Moby-Dick? Desert
islands? Explorers? Treasure hunters? The fleets of many nations? Hunters of
salvage (whether arche-salvage, nu-savage or alt-salvage)? Wreckers? Really, a
boy like Sham, setting out on his first voyage as assistant doctor aboard the
moletrain Medes, might encounter anything.
Miéville
portrays the railsea so well, using such twisted, yet concrete language, bristling
with his own invented rail jargon, that as you read you can feel the beat of
wheels on the rails and see the distant horizons, the dangerous knots of lines
and treacherous, the unmarked gauge changes that his characters negotiate. And he makes them real, as well – Sham, the
Captain with her philosophy, Sham’s crewmates, the strange Shroake siblings.
Like
them, Miéville speculates on where the railsea came from, and how it
persists. In Sham’s world, people are
inclined to attribute it to the old gods, such as That Apt Om, and the
repairwork to mysterious angel trains.
Nobody really wants to get to the bottom of things, just to make a
living. But sometimes, one doesn’t have
a choice…
This
is an excellent book, which I think will appeal to Miéville’s different groups
of followers – a story of adventure, more straightforward than Emassytown or
City and the City, but more focussed and (even) better realised than UnLundun.