Question about Perdido Street Station (minor spoiler)
I recently finished Perdido Street Station, and one minor thing that bothered me is how many of the other races were either a humanoid version of earth life (cactus person, bird person) or a literal combination of a human and something (head of a bug, body of a person). That just seems so fantastically unlikely that I wonder if any of the other books in that setting explain it. Like, is it a future earth and the races are results of generic modification in some prior era?
I liked the book pretty well, through it's not exactly uplifting. Thought provoking though.
That just seems so fantastically unlikely that I wonder if any of the other books in that setting explain it.
Not in any depth/at all and it is the fantastically unlikely nature of it that is one of the attractions of the series. As the setting is possibly an infinite plane, one of many, it helps get you straight into the idea that this is a strange and almost dream-like place. After all it has to be pretty odd to spawn it's only literary genre, even if very little has been able to achieve similar heights of weirdness.
I'm a fan of weird, but I'll be honest that it bugged me. On the other hand, I sat down with it knowing very little about it, but thinking it was SF. Though it has SF elements, it also has magic, so more of a fantasy novel and, for some reason, that makes the thing about the races easier to swallow. There doesn't have to be a valid explanation for fantasy, it just has to be internally consistent.
If you read The Scar it goes into how strange the setting is and how broken reality is in places. Some of the things in there may or may not explain some of the races, lime the cactus people. However, it is all kept very vague.
You should probably take it as a reaction against Tolkeinesque fantasy that draws on northern European myths. There's a wide range of influences as well as Mieville just making up oddities just for the sake of it. So, for example, Kephri is an Egyptian scarab-headed god and then everything is built around that. It doesn't have to be plausible it just has to contribute to the strangeness.
If you want to read something slightly closer to “normal” SF by him, The Embassy is good. Although my absolute favorite is still The City and The City, which is all about social mores and to a degree, castes.
I've never read anything quite like it. I picked it up in a second hand store for a couple of bucks while travelling, read it the first time and was completely confused, thn re read it a second and third time.
My takeaway is that it's an exercise in suspension of disbelief. The third time through I'd accepted that it was just...weird...and it became a grimy unsettling story about complex people with complex motivations.
It's like a 5 page spread for the whole spiel but this is the most relevant page.
The one thing i will add it that the eye thing primarily is super true and backed up by science as 20% of our brain is dedicated to visual functions and adding a third would make our heads very very hard to handle for almost 0 benefits.