Stevermer, Caroline - River Rats
Mon, Jan. 2nd, 2006 07:12 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Life after the Flash, a nuclear, apocalyptic-type disaster (or something), is tough, particularly if you're a band of kids on board a paddle wheeler on the Mississippi. Tomcat and his fellow River Rats come and go, performing at towns and delivering mail for food and other goods. One day, they rescue King from the river, and in doing so, unleash a whole world of trouble on themselves.
I felt like I should have liked this book more than I did. There's nothing in particular that I disliked about it; I just read it when I was down and over a period of weeks, so I often forgot what happened before I picked it up again. As such, the narrative felt very disjointed, and I didn't have a very good sense of who the characters were. Mostly I kept comparing the book to other books (The Postman for the post-apocalyptic delivering of mail and the intrusion of pre-apocalyptic technology and War for the Oaks for the music elements). I dunno. I don't think it's very fair of me to write up the book right now, because I strongly suspect that my mood had something to do with the emotional disconnect.
Anyhow, I'll keep it instead of selling it and hope that a reread makes me like it more.
I felt like I should have liked this book more than I did. There's nothing in particular that I disliked about it; I just read it when I was down and over a period of weeks, so I often forgot what happened before I picked it up again. As such, the narrative felt very disjointed, and I didn't have a very good sense of who the characters were. Mostly I kept comparing the book to other books (The Postman for the post-apocalyptic delivering of mail and the intrusion of pre-apocalyptic technology and War for the Oaks for the music elements). I dunno. I don't think it's very fair of me to write up the book right now, because I strongly suspect that my mood had something to do with the emotional disconnect.
Anyhow, I'll keep it instead of selling it and hope that a reread makes me like it more.