Rahul Sharma (Editor)

The Etched City

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
8.6
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
8.6
1 Ratings
100
90
81
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This


Author
  
K. J. Bishop

Awards
  
Crawford Award

3.6/5
Goodreads

Originally published
  
2003

Genre
  
Speculative fiction

The Etched City t1gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcQGxRQImL2KNWn3a3

Nominations
  
World Fantasy Award—Novel, Locus Award for Best First Novel

Similar
  
The Year of Our War, City of Saints and Madmen, Shatnerquake, Angel Dust Apocalypse, The Girl Who Chased t

The Etched City is the first novel (and the only one published to date) of the Australian science-fiction writer K. J. Bishop. It was published for the first time by Prime Books in 2003 (cover art done by K. J. Bishop herself), then by Tor / Pan Macmillan (in 2004 and 2005) and by Bantam Spectra (in 2004).

Contents

Analysis

The Etched City is a fantasy about love, unexplainable magics, and exile.

The novel has a style often described as New Weird, similar to the works of China Miéville, set in a society with a vaguely Victorian technology level. We read about two old friends, Raule – a healer and Gwynn – a bounty hunter, running from their homeland of Copper Country, chased by the winning side of the civil war they fought in. They reach the city of Ashamoil to start a new life, but they face unexpected and surreal trials.

The first few chapters show the pair moving together through Copper Country, a region with a part Wild West, part Arabian feel. They arrive and part ways in Ashamoil; a city which at first seems an alternate early 19th century city with a colonial twist. But, as the fantasy elements of the novel slowly show themselves as the story progresses we discover that it is a difficult city to pin down. Raule finds work in a slum hospital staffed by nuns, spending her time attempting to understand why so many deformed babies are born in her ward, in between stitching up local teenagers participating in skilled territorial knife fights. Gwynn is employed by a powerful criminal "family" dealing in slaves, along with his old friend from his homeland in the icy north. When not running errands for the ruthless master of this syndicate, Gwynn pursues an otherworldy woman who used him as inspiration for an art piece.

The story covers a bizarre variety of themes; characters speak at length in poetic phrases and muse about religion, obsession, karma and death, while vicious street battles are fought, drug-unlocked dimensions are explored and personal vendettas are carried out. Add to the mix meat sculptures that come alive, warped apothecaries selling psychedelic hallucinogens, and a cynical holy man with a dark and useless power and you only scratch the surface of K. J. Bishop's Etched City.

Publications

  • 2003 (February), publisher Prime Books, cover art by K. J. Bishop
  • 2004, publisher Tor / Pan Macmillan UK
  • 2004 (December), publisher Bantam Spectra, cover art by Paul You'll
  • 2005 (February), publisher Tor / Pan Macmillan UK
  • Reviews

  • William Thompson (2003) in Interzone, #190 July–August 2003
  • Faren Miller (2003) in The New York Review of Science Fiction, July 2003
  • James Sallis (2003) in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, August 2003
  • Gahan Wilson (2003) in Realms of Fantasy, October 2003
  • Greg Beatty (2003) in The New York Review of Science Fiction, December 2003
  • Michael Moorcock (2004) in The Guardian, January 2004
  • Sue Thomason (2004) in Vector 235
  • John C. Bunnell (2004) in Amazing Stories, December 2004
  • Vector 241
  • Awards

  • 2003 - Nomination Aurealis Award, Fantasy Novel
  • 2004 - Place 3 Locus Poll Award, Best First Novel
  • 2004 - Nomination World Fantasy Award, Best Novel
  • References

    The Etched City Wikipedia