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King Rat Kindle Edition

4.1 4.1 out of 5 stars 439 ratings

Award-winning author China Miéville began his astounding career with King Rat—now in a new Tor Essentials edition—a mix of a young man's search for identity with a pulse-pounding story of revenge and madness.

With a new introduction by Tim Maughan, author of Infinite Detail.

Something is stirring in London's dark, stamping out its territory in brickdust and blood. Something has murdered Saul Garamond's father, and left Saul to pay for the crime.

But a shadow from the urban waste breaks into Saul's prison cell and leads him to freedom: a shadow called King Rat. King Rat reveals to Saul his own royal heritage, a heritage that opens a new world for him, the world below London's streets.

With drum-and-bass pounding the backstreets, Saul must confront the forces that would use him, the ones that would destroy him, and those that have shaped his own bizarre identity.

Tor Essentials presents new editions of science fiction and fantasy titles of proven merit and lasting value, each volume introduced by an appropriate literary figure.

At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Saul Garamond returns from a journey in late evening and sneaks into his bedroom to avoid a confrontation with his estranged father. He awakes to the intrusion of police and the news that his father has been murdered and he is the number-one suspect. Forgotten in a jail cell, he is freed by a peculiar, stinking, and impossibly strong stranger--only to find rescue may be worse than imprisonment. The plot moves through subterranean and rooftop London quick as a techno beat, as Saul discovers his curious heritage and finds himself marked for death in an age-old secret war among frightful inhuman powers.

China Miéville's urban fantasy novel, King Rat, is an impressive, even daring, debut. It is a Lost Prince story that avoids both black-and-white morality and the standard fantasy-novel adoration of royalty. Furthermore, it is inspired by the unlikeliest of sources, the Rat King legend and the Pied Piper of Hamelin fairy tale. Finally, King Rat, powered and propelled by the rhythms of jungle/drum-'n'-bass music, is a fantasy novel set in the 1990s that genuinely captures the 1990s. --Cynthia Ward

From Publishers Weekly

In the past decade, contemporary renderings of traditional fairy tales have become a staple of fantasy fiction. This flashy riff on the Pied Piper theme marks a notable extension of the trend and an auspicious debut for its author. Saul Garamond is a restless young Londoner, aimlessly adrift, when he is wrongly imprisoned for the murder of his father. Saul is snatched from the authorities by a mysterious savior named King Rat, who claims to be both the deposed leader of the rodent army driven out of Hamelin 700 years before and Saul's real father. Raised as a human, Saul has much to unlearn before King can teach him to become a worthy opponent of the Rat Catcher, who framed Saul for murder and is still pursuing King. Meanwhile, the Rat Catcher forces his friendship on Saul's composer friend, Natasha, by posing as a flautist who hopes to work his melodies into her "drum 'n' bass" dance music and turn London's hip-hop underground into his unwitting stormtroopers. Though the plot is predictable and Saul's efforts to get in touch with his inner rat are clearly patterned on the Star Wars school of messiah-making, Mi?ville pulls the reader into the story through the kinetic energy of his prose. From the novel's opening image ("The trains that enter London arrive like ships sailing across the roofs"), the narrative crackles with a mesmerizing melange of impressionistic description and street slang that powerfully limns the squalid London cityscape. Paced at the rhythm of the Jungle music it evokes, this dark urban fantasy proves nearly as irresistible as the Pied Piper's tunes.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B008VK1LG8
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Tor Books (October 6, 2000)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ October 6, 2000
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 4617 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 304 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.1 4.1 out of 5 stars 439 ratings

About the author

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China Miéville
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China Miéville lives and works in London. He is three-time winner of the prestigious Arthur C. Clarke Award (Perdido Street Station, Iron Council and The City & The City) and has also won the British Fantasy Award twice (Perdido Street Station and The Scar). The City & The City, an existential thriller, was published in 2009 to dazzling critical acclaim and drew comparison with the works of Kafka and Orwell (The Times) and Philip K. Dick (Guardian).

Customer reviews

4.1 out of 5 stars
4.1 out of 5
439 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on June 27, 2002
i will admit that i picked up this book because it incorporated Drum n Bass into the story. DnB is my one true love and i wanted to see how the Mieville would pull this off, since DnB and its (mostly underground)culture are not somehting many people understand or even know about. Drum n Bass was the perfect genre of music for this fascinating novel about London's underground...but if a reader had no prior knowledge about the music and it's culture, they would only get a quick (and almost outdated?) lesson from this book. Anyway, i don't think Mieville's sole purpose was to educated unfamiliar readers about a musical genre from London's urban youth (with a 10+ year history) so much as to simply use it to help create and support his unqiue and mysterious scenes in the novel (such as the Rat King's sewers). Okay, about the novel for people who don't even care about DnB...i loved how it incoporated the childhood tale of the Piped Piper and made a present day story out of it. You are defintely brought into another world...one that lurks right under the city's feet. The reader can sympathize with the main character, Saul, who is violently dragged into this surreal situation. Some of Saul's revelations are probably familiar to many of us...such as how he can feel so very alone in a huge city that isn't even aware of the struggle ensuing below its streets-his struggle. It was a quick read for me and it is exciting since something new is always developing. I really enjoyed the book and it was nice to finally read something different for a change. I am looking foward to reading Peridio Street.
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on June 21, 2020
Love the stories of the author, but since so much of my enjoyment is derived from the elegant writing it seems such a shame that there haven't been put more effort into proof reading the novel before releasing it, as mistakes like this': " But King style="margin-top:1em"Rat prised him loose" are quite jarring.
Reviewed in the United States on April 6, 2001
After reading Mieville's phenomenal "Perdido Street Station" I rushed right out to buy his first novel, "King Rat." I could have delayed my haste. While also stylish and distinctively written, this dark, urban fantasy, compared to his second work, is a rough cut, much more loosely written and barely approaching the wonders or skill of writing present in the following novel. While I may be grudging of comment by comparison, "Perdido Street Station" is a masterpiece of speculative fiction, whereas "King Rat" reads as a someways good but fledgling effort. In many respects there is little to distinguish it from early Charles De Lint, though Mieville comes across here as more hip and involved with the music he provides as an underlying theme.
While certainly a departure from the ordinary fantasy, written with a degree of verve and suspense, drawing, as another reviewer has stated, upon the folklore of the Piper of Hamelin and tales of the rat king, placed within the context of modern day London and its vibrant, in part underground music scene, this tale lacks both the riveting use of language and the vivid world creation found in the author's second novel. Unlike "Perdido Street Station," as others have additionally noted, here the characters remain relatively flat, perhaps in part intentionally reflecting the cartoon characters referenced in the novel. As earlier stated, more loosely written and evolved, the cord of metaphor underlying the basic storyline never seems as fully integrated or realized as in Mieville's second novel, unable to entirely lift the tale above the surface of its active, running narrative, or significantly set it apart from other and equally skilled writers of urban fantasy.
Though I suspect fans of urban fantasy may find my observations too harsh, or critical by comparison, it is doubtful had I even not read "Perdido Street Station" that I would have been enamoured with this novel. Good but far from great, this is a very respectable first effort that should be applauded for what it attempts, even if not entirely successful. One catches glimpses of the brilliance later displayed and captured fully in "Perdido Street Station," as well as the author's desire to push speculative fiction beyond its normal boundaries. Nonetheless, I can only give this effort at best three and a half stars.
40 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on April 7, 2002
One theme amongst the other reviews for this marvelous book is to compare it to the author's next, Perdido Street Station which most people seem to have read first.
I did not. (In fact I have not yet read Perdido, having recently and reluctantly cancelled virtually all of my magazines due to the sad realization that there was not enough time in my life to keep up with both magazines and books.)
Nevertheless, I believe I would still have valued King Rat as highly as I do now.
King Rat layers levels of reality the way the physical geography of the book is layered with the surface of London, the downbelow, and occsionally the air when Loplop, King of the Birds is aloft.
The portrayal of the Techno - Drum and Bass milieu is perfectly realized as if by someone who must have lived it. The realm(s) of the three Kings, whom I cannot help but identify with Elementals, is both physically well drawn and (intentionally or not) an allegory for the sub-conscious.
The characters are exceptionally well portrayed. The reinvention of the Pied Piper is so audacious and effective that every page where he appears is haunted by a different Kind of Music entirely.
When I finished it, although probably not even the author would agree with the connection, there was nothing for it but to watch my DVD of The Sweet Hereafter, a different sort of work entirely, but one which also uses the Pied Piper as a significant metaphor.
Buy it. Read it. Be moved by it.
25 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on May 5, 2015
A well written, solid, dark urban fairy tale. Actually a pretty good read..

Top reviews from other countries

Arunima & Subham's
4.0 out of 5 stars "I can squeeze between buildings through spaces you can't even see."
Reviewed in India on April 17, 2021
Set against an urban multiplicity of London, Miéville’s debut novel takes us on a fairy-tale journey through sewers and ducts and cracks and a city which is dragged into an ancient conflict. Miéville politicizes (subtly so?) an alter-London, an assemblage of angles, gaps and refuse, seduced by sound, space and shadows; a London lurching and wheezing within the oblique fractures of a subterranean city. Vital and grotesque, Miéville presents the fantastic tale of the Pied Piper of Hamelin from the perspective of rat-beings and radicalizes the all-pervading grotesquerie of a folkloric conflict with his oddly gruesome descriptions of a city struck with panic and death. Perhaps not exceptional, but impressive nonetheless.
Customer image
Arunima & Subham's
4.0 out of 5 stars "I can squeeze between buildings through spaces you can't even see."
Reviewed in India on April 17, 2021
Set against an urban multiplicity of London, Miéville’s debut novel takes us on a fairy-tale journey through sewers and ducts and cracks and a city which is dragged into an ancient conflict. Miéville politicizes (subtly so?) an alter-London, an assemblage of angles, gaps and refuse, seduced by sound, space and shadows; a London lurching and wheezing within the oblique fractures of a subterranean city. Vital and grotesque, Miéville presents the fantastic tale of the Pied Piper of Hamelin from the perspective of rat-beings and radicalizes the all-pervading grotesquerie of a folkloric conflict with his oddly gruesome descriptions of a city struck with panic and death. Perhaps not exceptional, but impressive nonetheless.
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Andrée Laurier
4.0 out of 5 stars A good read!
Reviewed in Canada on October 10, 2018
Not his best littérature achievement but entertaining. I love this Writer.
ESShore
4.0 out of 5 stars king rat
Reviewed in Australia on June 30, 2023
I love reading these works by China Mieville. I like the worlds and the characters he creates. Strong, unpredictable and pugnacious.
Hob
5.0 out of 5 stars brilliant spin on an ancient story
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 4, 2014
A story everyone knows woven into a modern setting. A parallel world exists with a different order beneath and above the streets of London.
AvidJosh
5.0 out of 5 stars Avid reader
Reviewed in Canada on November 2, 2018
Another strong novel by a great writer. Interesting retelling of the ratcatcher story.

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