Reviews

Slow River by Nicola Griffith

jennyyates's review against another edition

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4.0

This is an intense novel, set in a recognizable near future. Griffith takes her protagonist from the boredom of a rich dysfunctional corporate family, and dumps her on the street. That’s where we find her as the novel begins, hiding and surviving, feeling suspicious of the people she once trusted, picking up some savvy to go with her rarefied background.

All the characters are vivid, and all are made unique through voice and gesture. Lore is drawn in a very physical way, and you feel everything she feels: the hunger, the lust, the drugs, the pain, the fatigue, the sense of being lost, the need to reconnect. It’s amazing to finish this wry novel and find it’s a love story after all.

juushika's review against another edition

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4.0


After her abduction, once-wealthy Lore is left with nothing but the questionable aid of a backstreet hacker named Spanner. Slow River is subtle at its best, overwritten at its worst. The relationship between Lore and Spanner is a nuanced dialog about class, abuse, and trauma recovery; Lore is granted strong conflicting emotions about Spanner without erasing the problematic aspects of their relationship. But the book has a flow-sundering tripart narrative--each with a different tense/PoV--and hamfisted, repetitive themes. It's also set in a near future which is sometime secondary backdrop to the more interesting interpersonal aspects and sometimes involved ridiculously intricate explorations of theoretical sewage treatment. (I was reminded of Hugh Howey's Wool: the minute practical details are researched, convincing, strangely compelling, and yet inane upon reflection.) The sum is a strange little book, well-intended, sometimes heartbreaking in its subtlety, sometimes off-putting in its heavy-handedness. I don't particularly recommend it, but what I liked about it I truly loved.

(I was also struck by the similarity to Kelly Eskridge's Solitaire, and then discovered that the two are partners; I'm also not the first reviewer to make the connection. Of the two, I find Solitaire the more successful.)

sunflowerjess's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional mysterious tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

5.0

This was my second book by Nicola Griffith, and it packed as much of a punch as the first. She is an incredible writer and just sucks the reader into the story. I found myself aching and cheering for Lore throughout her journey. 

oisin's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

5.0

gs_227's review against another edition

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challenging dark sad tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.25

caramm's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional hopeful reflective sad slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

5.0

outcolder's review against another edition

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5.0

Privilege, responsibility, sewage treatment, drug addiction and sexualized violence in a near future written just long enough ago that it is about our present and so dead on that it seems more like realism than SF, except they keep calling the tablets 'slates' and the bank cards are surgically implanted. I especially liked the bits about finding your place at a new job where the work is intense and long, and the sense of camaraderie when you do get your groove at work like that. Bonus points for having lots of lesbian characters but not being about lesbians... what I mean is... Oh never mind, you know what I mean. I guess the crime stuff in it felt a little 90s cyberpunk/neo-noir. I think if you're in the clone club you will dig this.

thepurplebookwyrm's review

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dark hopeful mysterious reflective medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

3.25

My experience with Nicola Griffith's fiction remains decidedly mixed, as I thought Slow River was, yet again... just fine.

Premise and plot-wise, this particular novel centres on Lore, the daughter of a wealthy and powerful family in the water sanitisation and broader bio-remediation business, at three different points in her life: during her childhood, right after she has turned eighteen, and escaped the people who kidnapped and held her for ransom – with both of these timelines being told in third person POV. And three or so years later, in the present (and in first person POV), as Lore is about to start a new job at her local water treatment plant, new identity in hand.

Mine is an SF Masterworks edition of Slow River, yet it honestly barely qualifies as science-fiction. I assume the specifics of biochemical remediation, whilst based in fact, are developed into 'near-future speculation' territory – but cannot state this with any sort of certainty. People also carry combo DNA and ID chips in the webbing of their hands, as well as digital 'slates' (i.e. tablets as imagined by peeps back in the 90s). And that's about it. As such, there really isn't much to say in terms of world-building; I'll concede the bioremediation props up very superficial theming on the intersection between ecological and socio-economic justice (or rather injustice), but beyond that... I got nothin'. Additionally, I never learned where, exactly, the present timeline actually took place. Lore references several cities and areas of the world she lived in and travelled to as a child, then teenager, but I couldn't tell whether her present-day town, or city, was in Northern Europe of the Northern US – though I guess it didn't ultimately matter either way.

Oh, actually, let me add this: why the hell is this categorised as cyberpunk?! That doesn't make a lick of sense to me. The only reason I could possibly come up with for this truly bizarre genre attribution is that Spanner, the book's main secondary character, lives on the margins of society and (partly) survives by hacking into personal slates. That would be the 'low life' side of the cyberpunk equation, but then it doesn't really work when considering its 'high tech' side. I mean I guess biotech technically qualifies, but then shouldn't it be biopunk instead? And honestly, I don't think one can make a particularly strong case for that either, since I'm pretty sure most people would expect much higher (stakes) levels of biological/medical engineering, done on people as well, in works belonging to that sub-genre. But eh, your mileage will undoubtedly vary here.

So then we have character work, and theming. Regarding the former: I'd consider Slow River a character-driven novel. Barring the fact this is not my preference (especially when it comes to speculative, or in this case speculative-lite fiction), I'd say the character work, here, was good enough to carry the story Ms Griffith wanted to tell in this novel. The complicated (and somewhat abusive, to be honest) relationship between Lore and Spanner was convincingly fleshed out; the familial intrigue, or drama, was satisfactorily developed. I can't say the same for the 'romance' that eventually bloomed between Lore and another character – it wasn't full-on Instalove™, but it didn't feel particularly organic to me either. That being said, yes: the lesbian representation in Slow River was as seamless as I found it in Ms Griffth's much more recent Spear, so point there!

I guess my main issue with the book lies with its attempt at theming, especially as it relates to character work, and/or psychology. It felt like the story tried to say something about familial trauma, and shifting identity, but none of it felt particularly well realised, engaging, or insightful. It was exactly as superficial as the 'messaging' I perceived about ecological and socio-economic injustice.

I enjoy Ms Griffith's prose, and have enjoyed the base premises, or concepts, of all three of her books that I've read so far. It's just that... I'm always left rather frustrated when it comes to the unrealised potential of said base premises, and the theming I initially glimpse therein. #Sadge

PS: I actually enjoyed the book's info-dumping on biochemical remediation, sue me. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

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tricapra's review against another edition

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5.0

Wow. If I thought how much I loved Ammonite was a fluke or a one-off, I was certainly wrong. Nicola Griffith absolutely knocked this out of the park, and I found myself quietly crying in my car as the audiobook finished. I went into Slow River completely blind, and I'm very glad I did. A winding, time-skipping narrative of abuse, healing, and identity in a very-near-future sci-fi setting. Very much about how we deal with trauma and the choices we make (when we feel like we don't have choices). Griffith also writes some of the most compelling lesbian romances I've ever read, and one of my favorite aspects is that she chose to make sexual orientation in the future such a complete non-issue in every way. Refreshing.

tamaru22's review against another edition

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4.0

Gritty setting, slow-building and interesting.