Order of China Mieville Books

China Mieville is an English author of fantasy, steampunk and New Weird fiction novels and stories as well as non-fiction books. He has won the Arthur C. Clark, British Fantasy, Locus, Hugo, Kitschies and World Fantasy awards multiple times each. Although China is mostly associated with fantasy genre (and the like), he has said he intends to write a novel in each genre. He has his B.A. in social anthropology and his Master’s and Ph.D in international relations.
China Mieville made his debut as a published author in 1998 with the standalone novel King Rat. Below is a list of China Mieville’s books in order of when they were originally published:
Publication Order of New Crobuzon Books
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Perdido Street Station |
(2000) |
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The Scar |
(2002) |
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Iron Council |
(2004) |
Publication Order of Dial H: The New 52 Graphic Novels
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Dial H, Vol. 1 |
(2012) |
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Dial H, Vol. 2 |
(2012) |
Publication Order of Standalone Novels
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King Rat |
(1998) |
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Un Lun Dun |
(2007) |
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The City & the City |
(2009) |
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Kraken |
(2010) |
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Embassytown |
(2011) |
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Railsea |
(2012) |
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This Census-Taker |
(2016) |
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The Last Days of New Paris |
(2016) |
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The Book of Elsewhere |
(2024) |
Publication Order of Short Stories/Novellas
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The Tain |
(2002) |
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Reports of Certain Events in London |
(2004) |
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Details |
(2005) |
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‘Tis the Season / Um Conto de Natal |
(2010) |
Publication Order of Short Story Collections
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Looking for Jake |
(2005) |
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Three Moments of an Explosion |
(2009) |
Publication Order of Picture Books
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The Worst Breakfast |
(2016) |
Publication Order of Non-Fiction Books
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Between Equal Rights |
(2006) |
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War With No End |
(2007) |
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Red Planets |
(2009) |
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London’s Overthrow |
(2012) |
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October |
(2017) |
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A Spectre, Haunting: On the Communist Manifesto |
(2022) |
Publication Order of Contemporary Writers: Critical Essays Books
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David Mitchell: Critical Essays |
(2011) |
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Maggie Gee: Critical Essays |
(2015) |
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China Miéville: Critical Essays |
(2015) |
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Adam Roberts: Critical Essays |
(2016) |
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Rupert Thomson: Critical Essays |
(2016) |
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Tom McCarthy: Critical Essays |
(2016) |
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M. John Harrison: Critical Essays |
(2019) |
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Nicola Barker: Critical Essays |
(2020) |
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Michel Faber: Critical Essays |
(2020) |
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Sarah Hall: Critical Essays |
(2022) |
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Publication Order of Year’s Best Fantasy Books
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Year’s Best Fantasy |
(2001) |
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Year’s Best Fantasy 2 |
(2002) |
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Year’s Best Fantasy 3 |
(2003) |
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Year’s Best Fantasy 4 |
(2004) |
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Year’s Best Fantasy 5 |
(2005) |
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Year’s Best Fantasy 6 |
(2006) |
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Year’s Best Fantasy 7 |
(2007) |
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Year’s Best Fantasy 8 |
(2008) |
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Year’s Best Fantasy 9 |
(2009) |
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+ Show All Books in this Series
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Anthology series. |
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Publication Order of Anthologies
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Brit-pulp! |
(1999) |
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Cities |
(2003) |
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The Thackery T. Lambshead Pocket Guide to Eccentric & Discredited Diseases |
(2003) |
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The Mammoth Book of Best New Horror 14 |
(2003) |
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The Children of Cthulhu |
(2003) |
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Breaking Windows |
(2003) |
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Year’s Best Fantasy and Horror: Sixteenth Annual Collection |
(2003) |
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Best New Horror 17 |
(2006) |
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Year’s Best Fantasy and Horror: Nineteenth Annual Collection |
(2006) |
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The New Weird |
(2008) |
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Creatures: Thirty Years of Monsters |
(2011) |
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The Recent Weird |
(2011) |
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New Cthulhu: The Recent Weird |
(2011) |
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The Library Book |
(2012) |
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Flotsam Fantastique: The Souvenir Book of World Fantasy Convention 2013 |
(2013) |
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The Bestiary |
(2015) |
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2001: An Odyssey in Words |
(2018) |
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The Outcast Hours |
(2019) |
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Out of the Ruins: The Apocalyptic Anthology |
(2021) |
Notes: Cities also has stories by Peter Crowther, Paul Di Filippo, Michael Moorcock and Geoff Ryman.Breaking Windows also includes stories by Barrington J. Bayley, Michael Moorcock, James Sallis and Jeff VanderMeer. The Bestiary also has stories by Rikki Ducornet, Karen Lord, Dexter Palmer, Vandana Singh, Karin Tidbeck and Catherynne M. Valente.
War with No End also includes contributions by John Berger, Naomi Klein, Hanif Kureishi, Arundhati Roy, Joe Sacco, Ahdaf Soueif and Haifa Zangana. Red Planets was co-authored by Mark Bould. The Library Book also has contributions from Alan Bennett, Ann Cleeves, Seth Godin, Susan Hill, Tom Holland, Val McDermid, Lucy Mangan, Caitlin Moran, Kate Mosse, Julie Myerson, Bali Rai, Lionel Shriver and Hardeep Kohli Singh.