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The Past Is Red by Catherynne M. Valente
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The Past Is Red (original 2021; edition 2021)

by Catherynne M. Valente (Author)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
3022086,773 (4.05)13
The future is blue-endless blue... except for a few small places that float across the hot, drowned world left behind by long-gone fossil fuel-guzzlers. One of those patches is a magical place called Garbagetown. Tetley Abednego is the most beloved girl in Garbagetown, but she's the only one who knows it. She's the only one who knows a lot of things: that Garbagetown is the most wonderful place in the world, that it's full of hope, that you can love someone and 66% hate them all at the same time. But Earth is a terrible mess, hope is a fragile thing, and a lot of people are very angry with her. Then Tetley discovers a new friend, a terrible secret, and more to her world than she ever expected.… (more)
Member:psutto
Title:The Past Is Red
Authors:Catherynne M. Valente (Author)
Info:Tordotcom (2021), 160 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:****
Tags:2023 Challenge

Work Information

The Past Is Red by Catherynne M. Valente (2021)

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» See also 13 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 19 (next | show all)
This one hurts, but if you're a nihilist / cynic / pessimist who's trying to work on all that... this might give you pause about how you treat other people, and how you interact with the world, and how you wish things would go back to the way they were. Near-future sci-fi mindfulness. ( )
  IsraOverZero | Sep 23, 2023 |
"Anarchy Can be so cozy if you bring enough pillows" Tetley the only sane Garbagetowner

In the spirit of this book; WHAT in the actual F$vK! It's not often a book does an absolute mindscramble like breakfast eggs on me without horror tropes filled with blood and gore. This one has been so damned and so unsettling and different, truly horrifying. I just want to do a mindmelt with the author so I can get an understanding of what in the everloving f$vk is going on up in there.

I devoured this book much like the Thames came up and swallowed Londontown whole and left eels behind. It was a glorious read.

**************************************************
Review Breakdown: deserves a 10/5


General Plot: 5 no matter how absurd the cities sound, Pill hill, Electric City, Garbagetown, the fact that this is a very real possibility even if it is probably 100 years away is terrifying.

Characters: 3 Everyone is so very bloody haunting.

Style/Grammar: 1 F&$*ng unique. This is prose like no other.

Overall Flow: 2

Quotes: A fat seagull eyed me from the top of a cliff of shredded vinyl and hood ornaments. Dead psychosis spun up in his dead eyes. I don't mean to say he was a bad bird. All seagulls are dead-eyed psychos. If the whole fuckwit culture was a bird, it would be a seagull. Ravenous, stupid, vicious, not a single shit given, nice feathers.

Memorable Scene: Tetley negotiating updating a user profile with what sounds suspiciously like a talking vibrator (or a lamp? It's murky at best) powered by TENG and Samsung - all while a psycho seagull hovers about shooting death stares at her.

StoryGraph Challenge: 1800 books by 2025
Challenge Prompt: 150 Speculative Fiction Books ( )
1 vote RoadtripReader | Aug 24, 2023 |
The post-apocalyptic setting and many references to Shakespeare bring Station Eleven to mind, but this book is too in love with its own cleverness to provide the emotional depth of that novel. The many fanciful names for neighborhoods in Garbagetown are occasionally amusing, but if it's supposed to be satire that so many items are both still preserved and functional 100 years into the collapse of industrial society, it's not clear. Too much of the story is mushy and reliant on "tone" for me to really appreciate it, though I am very much in agreement that climate change is an existential threat that we should be doing more to avoid and/or mitigate. And settling Mars is not the answer! ( )
  therem | Aug 23, 2023 |
What an utterly bizarre book!
At times the writing was poignant and other times nonsensical and hard to read as the English the characters used in this book had its own vernacular that was hard to get my head around.
The overall tone of the book is quite bleak and yet I wanted to know how it ended. Not quite sure how I feel about it all but definitely unlike anything else I have read. ( )
  spiritedstardust | May 24, 2023 |
HOW TO EVEN TALK ABOUT THIS BOOK?

It takes place on a floating garbage patch in a post-climate-crisis world where everything is now underwater and the pre-crisis people are reviled as the fuckwits they/we were/are for recklessly destroying everything. All of society/identity is based on what kind of garbage you process to add to the island. And our protagonist has done something so huge/drastic/unpopular that the law is that anyone can do anything they like to her -- curse her, attack her, destroy her things, and she is supposed to thank them "for the instruction."

And yet? Telley is somehow made of hope? And love for all that is left? And the book is about making connections and the power of stories and loving what you have and letting go of what you don't. As is typical of Valente, I got to a certain point and felt whomped by how much I loved this. She is made of magic. ( )
  greeniezona | May 23, 2023 |
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My name is Tetley Abednego and I am the most hated girl in Garbagetown.
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Being alive is like being a very bad time traveler. One second per second, and yet somehow you still get where you're going too late, or too early, and the planet isn't where it should be because you forgot to calculate for that even though it was extremely important and you left notes by the door to remind yourself, and the butterfly you stepped on when you were eight became a hurricane of everything you ever lost in your forties, and whatever wisdom you tried to pack with you has always gotten lost in transit, arriving, covered in festive stickers, a hundred years after you died.
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The future is blue-endless blue... except for a few small places that float across the hot, drowned world left behind by long-gone fossil fuel-guzzlers. One of those patches is a magical place called Garbagetown. Tetley Abednego is the most beloved girl in Garbagetown, but she's the only one who knows it. She's the only one who knows a lot of things: that Garbagetown is the most wonderful place in the world, that it's full of hope, that you can love someone and 66% hate them all at the same time. But Earth is a terrible mess, hope is a fragile thing, and a lot of people are very angry with her. Then Tetley discovers a new friend, a terrible secret, and more to her world than she ever expected.

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