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The Flood is not a crime novel. Mary Miller is an alienated young woman. As a child, she had had an accident involving a flood of chemical discharges from the local coal mine -- she had survived, badly injured, but sympathy for her plight evaporated when the man who was responsible for the accident met his death in a mining accident shortly after. The pious community she lives in views her with superstitious dread. Time passes, and she gives birth to an illegitimate son, Sandy. Her unsatisfactory love affair with a teacher is going nowhere, and her son has started a relationship with a homeless girl. But both Sandy and his mother have to confront the past, and both find their lives will be changed by elemental forces -- notably the flood of the title.
As the above conveys, this is sombre stuff, but that won't put off Rankin aficionados, who look for the dark and disturbing in his work. While the book is (inevitably) not as fully achieved as his later work, there are many fascinating pre-echoes of the off-kilter psychology that is Rankins stock-in-trade, and any rough edges of the narrative are more than offset by the power of the already highly individual vision on offer here. --Barry Forshaw --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Unusual coming of age story,
By
This review is from: The Flood (Paperback)
Having now read a few of his Rebus novels, I picked this book up looking for something different by Ian Rankin. I wasn't disappointed.The Flood is an unusual coming-of-age narrative that takes place in a small Scottish ex-mining community over two generations. It handles a range of themes including small town prejudice, alcholism, bigotry, incest, abuse, guilt and social isolation. It tracks two generations of a family from the 1970s to the present day as the social infrastructure of their surrounding community gradually disintegrates and self-destructs. Mostly the narrative is taken from the view of a boy as he comes of age in a bigotted community that shuns his mother and questions his parenthood. This is a richly painted narrative full of sensitive insight and deep characterisation. I won't say more - I found the novel moving and interesting. Although there is partial resolution at the end - one of the central mysteries is clarified - it does feel incomplete as if more is to come. Nevertheless a very good read.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Disturbing tale,
By Dona Rendell (UK) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Flood (Paperback)
This is the first of Rankin's novel and shows great promise. The story is dark and tense, the characters complex and the narrative engaging. The story is about finding one's place in the world and growing up. Superstition and suspense are well mixed to create a disturbing plot.On the negative side, the plot felt forced at times and the novel itself could have been shortened; while reading the book, I often thought that omitting parts of it would have made it much better. Overall, a good story with complex characters, nostaligic and dark.
3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Too drawn out and no proper ending,
By Al (Farnborough, UK) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Flood (Paperback)
This is the first full novel that Ian Rankin ever wrote, having previously only written some short stories. In the recently-added introduction he says that he started writing this as a short story and later developed it into a full-length novel; it certainly shows. The story is not just slow, there is so little plot or storyline to it that it is really all about characterisation and insights into family and community matters, without anything significant actually happening for most of the book. It really needs more of a storyline to carry it along. Had it been short-story length it would have been OK.The ending is dreadful - the book just sort of fizzle out. After reading such a slow, dragging story I felt quite cheated by it all. There are indications of Ian Rankin's skill as a writer, but overall this book left me wondering why I bothered reading it. I'll stick to his Rebus novels in future.
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