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Pink Slime
Pink Slime | FERNANDA. TRIAS
2 posts | 2 read | 1 to read
Winner of the Uruguayan National Literature Prize for Fiction, the Bartolomé-Hidalgo Fiction Prize, and the Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz Literature Prize. A port city is in the grips of an ecological crisis. The river has filled with toxic algae, and a deadly 'red wind' blows through the city, forcing everyone indoors at the sound of a siren. Those exposed to the wind fall ill; much of the coast has been evacuated, with rich people migrating inland to escape the wind, while others remain behind, sheltering in abandoned houses as blackouts and food shortages abound, and a black-market economy reigns. The unnamed narrator is one of those who has stayed, looking after a boy who's been placed in her care. As the city outside continues to break down, she reflects on the collapse of her emotional ties, the uncertainty of this new world, and the emergence of a radical solitude. With striking prose and vivid characters, Pink Slimeoffers profound reflections on motherhood, marriage, and caregiving, set against the backdrop of a climate-ravaged, deteriorating city.
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Sara_Planz
Pink Slime | FERNANDA. TRIAS
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Pickpick

This translated novel is a powerful example of a literary dystopian novel. Not only does it delve into the climate change issue, but it also explores government inaction, class and wealth. This is not a big action book in the face of the destruction of the world, this is a quiet and thoughtful look at what could happen to the average person in this situation, when we battle to survive but also hold onto a past that no longer exists.

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nosferatu
Pink Slime | FERNANDA. TRIAS
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Mehso-so

There is an interesting story somewhere in here – the protagonist navigating a nameless city ravaged by environmental disaster –, but almost no plot, no tension, no incentive to keep reading. Unfortunately, I didn‘t find the protagonist‘s stilted poetic musings all that inspiring, while all the interesting ideas serve as no more than a vague backdrop: the sickness, an imploding food industry etc.