Rivers of London

400 pages

Published March 27, 2011 by Gollancz.

ISBN:
978-0-575-09756-8
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4 stars (12 reviews)

1 edition

Review of 'Rivers of London' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

A cheeky wee re-read here. My 'to-be-read' pile is giving me a seriously disapproving look but I felt the need for some comfort reading. Re-reading favourites is definitely in that category.
Started and finished in the same night but to be fair, this is a book I have read a few times so that is to be expected.
When I think to review this book (and the series) the phrase that comes to mind is 'sense of place'. This is a story that is as much about a place (in its modern, mutlicultural incarnation) as it is about the people in the story. Which is not to say the characters aren't good, they are a delight, I am just not sure they are the star of the show.
The other thread that springs to mind is 'matter of factness'. Magic is just accepted with a shrug because, well, bad stuff …

Review of 'Rivers of London' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

I really enjoyed this book. In many ways it was similar to the Dresden novels, but also not. I can't quite articulate the differences besides the obvious: cop vs. PI, UK vs US.

I loved the world Aaronovitch is created and the way it works. The old Gods remind me of Gaiman, and the unclear understanding of the nature of ghosts is pretty cool. I also like the idea of vestigia, which I just learned is a standard word used in reference to magic: ""the imprint magic leaves on physical objects or places.""

Considering the build-up this seemed to wrap up pretty quickly, and the solution was supposed to entail significant risk, which is why it was avoided earlier in the novel, but that risk didn't seem to materialize during the climax. At least I didn't feel it. Also, I want to know more about Leslie's fate. Maybe in the …

Review of 'Rivers of London' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

“I've already told the police what happened, but they didn't believe me. Why should you?” he said. “Because we're the people that believe people that other people don't believe,” I said.


This was gripping, gritty fiction with humour that works and magic handled neatly. Postmodern, almost, I thought - an upgraded, slicker Dresden files set in Britain. If you like that sort of thing, highly recommended.

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