Riverwork
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- $17.99
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- $17.99
Publisher Description
A lost river, a lost aunt, a found literary life: from the cult-favourite poet and author of The Baudelaire Fractal comes a glittering and erudite new novel of Paris. Some ruins are invisible.
Under the pavements of Paris there lies buried an ancient river, the Bièvre. For years, Lucy Frost has walked along these streets, unaware of the water and history under her feet, on her way to clean the apartments of Paris’s academic class. As she begins to study and transcribe the inherited notebooks and papers of her great-aunt, a teacher and researcher who disappeared years earlier, she commits to continuing her aunt’s youthful research on the Bièvre, mining the river’s documentary traces in the works of Rousseau, Rabelais, Hugo, Chateaubriand, and the like. She uncovers a history of industry: paper mills, dyeing workshops, tanneries, and textile manufacturers – and laundries.
She finds resonances of her own labour in the history of the river’s laundresses. On stolen time at work, and in her insomniac hours of nightwriting, she fills notebooks with these woven stories and descriptions of obsolete sites, textiles, cosmologies, and voices, constructing her own forms of relation with the lost.
Riverwork unearths not just an urban river but also a philosophy of research and the archive, a politics of hydrology, an ontology of ageing and belatedness, and a consideration of the unrepresented labour of women, past and present. Along the way it brings to life, in pyrotechnic prose, a long-gone Paris and both its domestic workers and its writers.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
Riverwork feels like a beautiful act of excavation. This slim, cerebral novel’s narrator spends her days cleaning apartments in Paris and her nights following the traces of what has vanished: both her great-aunt, who disappeared years ago, and the Bièvre, the lost river buried beneath the Parisian streets. Inherited notebooks and bundles of research pull her into a forgotten history of laundresses, dye works, tanneries, and the women whose backbreaking work once shaped the river before both they and it were pushed out of sight. What makes this book so remarkable is the way Canadian poet and essayist Lisa Robertson (author of the cult favourite The Baudelaire Fractal) turns research into something intimate and alive. Dusty index cards, old textiles, insomnia, and apartment stairwells all become part of the same meditation on the dignity of labor and whose accomplishments get to be remembered. Dense, allusive, and quietly mesmerizing, Riverwork is a book you’ll want to read slowly, highlighting as you go.