A review by poisonenvy
The Past Is Red by Catherynne M. Valente

emotional reflective sad medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.75

This book isn't quite five-stars, but it's near enough to not really matter. 

This is an incredibly short novel, clocking in at about 150 pages, which follows the story of Tetley, from when she was a girl to when she grows to be a woman. 

Long after the iceburgs have melted and the level of the sea has risen to the point where no more land exists, people continue living on. Tetley lives on Garbagetown, a floating city of garbage (and, in fact, this floating Texas-sized mound of garbage floating around the ocean actually does exist). Tetley is also the most hated woman of Garbagetown, having done something in the past where everyone in Garbagetown is permitted to instruct her however they want, with her thanks. 

More than something with a solid plot, this is a look at Tetley's life, and a view into a version of the world that isn't too hard to imagine coming to fruition at some point in the near future. 


It took me a moment to get into this book, but once I did I tore through it. Tetley looks at the world with a Candide-like optimism, and yet I would argue she sees the world more clearly than most of the others who live on Garbagetown.  Valente has an excellent way of writing where she'll feed you some information that only leads to more questions, and the will feed you the answers piecemeal, so an image of the whole begins to form, like a paint-by-numbers. 

There were several parts that I'd consider POV slips, comparisons and analogies that I don't actually believe Tetley would have made, but this book is emotional and thought-provoking, and I loved it a lot. 

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