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Un Lun Dun
by China Miéville


  
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Book Description

As I read Un Lun Dun, China Miéville’s satisfying first fantasy novel for teens, I could imagine that his literary influences might include Norton Juster’s The Phantom Tollbooth, Neil Gaiman’s Neverwhere, Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland, and even J. R. R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings. Miéville conjures up a wonderful alternative world – both like and unlike London - where words are alive, houses are constructed from all sorts of material that’s mildly obsolete in London (hence, “moil” houses), books talk, giraffes are far from gentle animals, wraiths abound, propheseers more or less correctly predict the future, and a dark cloud dreams of polluting the world into extinction. But wait – the prophecies proclaim that Shwazzy will arrive in the nick of time and save UnLondon from certain smoggy doom. Turns out that Shwazzy is really 12-year-old Zanna, who magically arrives from London with her best friend, Deeba (who adopts a cardboard milk carton in UnLondon and names it Curdle), and heroically undertakes to fulfill what’s been foretold. But nothing happens quite as it’s supposed to, and there are many scary encounters and death-defying adventures (as well as puns and other wordplays) before good prevails, at least for the time being.




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