Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Book Reviews of Slow River

Slow River
Slow River
Author: Nicola Griffith
ISBN-13: 9780006480334
ISBN-10: 0006480330
Publication Date: 1995
Pages: 300
Rating:
  • Currently 4.2/5 Stars.
 3

4.2 stars, based on 3 ratings
Publisher: Del Rey Books
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

4 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

PhoenixFalls avatar reviewed Slow River on + 185 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This is a deeply impressive novel. It is exquisitely crafted: the pace is measured, but sure; the metaphors are used delicately; and the control over perspective (shifting between first person, tight third person, and loose present-tense third person for the three different timelines) is both absolute and absolutely necessary to the emotional arc being told. It is a novel to mull over, savor.

It is also an incredibly intense experience, or at least it was for me. I read it slowly partly so that I could admire Griffith's work, but mostly because reading it for more than half an hour at a time left me introspective and melancholy. There is a great deal of pain in the novel, and the carefully distanced prose makes it all the easier for the reader to fill in the blanks. For all the science fiction trappings (and they are many, from the cyberpunk-ish (but mostly irrelevant) identity hacking to the bioremediation science that furnishes much of the plot and much of the imagery) this story is about trauma, and surviving trauma, and then surviving your survival tactics. It's about ethics, and class, and identity, and monsters that come in human shape. It's vaguely dystopian without being political, and it's about corporate espionage while refusing to forget that corporations are anything but faceless.

I can't say I loved the book; it was far too emotionally hard for that. It left me unsettled and totally drained, and I don't know that I would ever read it again. But I will certainly be picking up everything else Griffith ever writes.
chaclaw avatar reviewed Slow River on + 22 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This gritty and beautiful book should become a cult classic if it is not already. The author does you the kindness of assuming you know how this future world works, and skips the nerdy explanations to jump right into an intriguing spy/detective story. Total immersion into a polluted future that is centered around the world's water supply, told from the perspective of a gay rich girl who is forced to become someone else. I am not sure I will swap this out before I read it another time.
reviewed Slow River on + 3 more book reviews
One of the best near future novels I have ever read.
ophelia99 avatar reviewed Slow River on + 2527 more book reviews
This was an okay book set in the future. The story focuses around a young woman, Lore, who's been kidnapped. When her parents refuse to pay the ransom she ends up broken and alone in an alley. Eventually she is picked up by a woman named Spanner. Spanner helps her learn how to make a less than legal living off grid.

Eventually Lore decides to try to make a honest living and this leads her to somewhat accidentally uncovering a number of secrets from her past.

The story jumped around a lot between Lore's childhood, the near past, and the present. It was decently done and never got all that confusing. The writing style is beautifully done and descriptive.

Somehow the whole story just came off as feeling a bit pointless to me. I did enjoy the world-building but never found either the characters or the story all that engaging. I almost stopped reading this a few times because I just didn't really care much. I kept hoping that something amazing was going to happen to tie everything together but it never really did.

Overall this was okay but not great. It very much has that mid-90's somewhat ambiguous cyberpunk feel to it...if that's your thing you might enjoy this.