Metacritic Books

Slow Man
by J. M. Coetzee

ISBN: 0670034592
Viking, 208 pages, $24.95
Fiction General Literature & Fiction
Released 09/22/2005

The latest novel from the Nobel Prize-winning author tells the story of an Australian photographer who must adjust his life after losing a leg in a bicycle accident.

Overall Metascore

This is an average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

66 / 100

Critic Reviews

Outstanding The Independent Justin Cartwright
Coetzee is a unique voice; no novelist explores ideas and the power of literature and the sense of displacement so boldly. Slow Man will add to his immense reputation.
Outstanding The New York Times Book Review Ward Just
Beautifully composed, deeply thought, wonderfully written.
Outstanding TLS: The Times Literary Supplement Andrew van der Vlies
Slow Man... offers itself as a meditation on living and writing, and an enactment of Coetzee's prognosis for the novel as a genre, for what it must be. It is further witness to J. M. Coetzee's achievement as one of the most intelligent and important writers writing today.
Favorable Village Voice Benjamin Strong
In Slow Man, Coetzee confronts by analogy his own predicament, that of the obsolete dissident.
Favorable New York Review Of Books John Lanchester
[Slow Man] is a book for the noncasual reader of [Coetzee's] work; it is a book which, despite its transparent sentences, is designed to make the reader think hard; and for the reader who passes those two tests, it has a real emotional charge.
Favorable The Globe And Mail [Toronto] Lee Henderson
Along with his pessimistic temperament, Rayment's missing leg adds him to a literary continuum that includes Melville's reclusive Ahab and Beckett's reclusive Murphy, and both Invisible Men. [22 Oct 2005, p.D17]
Favorable Houston Chronicle Rachel Graves
I found the writing lovely, the clip remarkably brisk for a book that takes place almost entirely inside one man's head, and the ideas about self, loneliness and old-age provocative.
Favorable The Spectator Anita Brookner
It is no small achievement to have created such a miasma of feeling, to leave us convinced and unsettled, and above all face to face with imponderables to which there is no solution.
Favorable The Independent D J Taylor
Full of the deftest psychological touches and some acutely realised brooding on the old fictional firm of memory and desire, Slow Man's code--if code it is--stays resolutely, and tantalisingly, uncrackable.
Favorable Daily Telegraph Matt Thorne
It is an undeniably peculiar read, but Coetzee has profound things to say about ageing, writing, and accepting one's lot in life.
Favorable LA Weekly Brendan Bernhard
This is a pitiless, sometimes frighteningly lucid study of late middle age, physical deterioration and dwindling choices. Cheers!
Favorable London Review Of Books Peter D. McDonald
For all its playfully serious subversions of the realist tradition, Slow Man is not an annihilating or "merely literary" exercise. If it turns its back on the traditional novel, and exposes the limits of various other discursive conventions, it does so in order to affirm the truculent, dignified singularity of things
Favorable Publishers Weekly
Some readers will object to... the abstract forays into the mysteriousness of the writing process. It is to Coetzee's credit, however, a testament to his flawless prose and appealing voice, that while challenging the reader with postmodern shenanigans, the story of how Paul will take charge of his life and love continues to engage. [29 Aug 2005, p.35]
Favorable Salon Hillary Frey
This novel is a welcome addition to a unique oeuvre.
Mixed Los Angeles Times Natasha S. Randall
By climbing inside the labyrinth, Coetzee sacrifices his story to his ideas. As a novel, "Slow Man" is disappointing, but as a book of ideas, it is fascinating. [24 Sep 2005, p.E1]
Mixed Boston Globe Gail Caldwell
Coetzee has sacrificed his characters for his ponderous hypotheses about love and legacy and leaving a trace in the world.
Unfavorable Christian Science Monitor Yvonne Zipp
Slow Man has the distinction of being the worst novel I've read by a Nobel winner.
Unfavorable Daily Telegraph Siddhartha Deb
[Coetzee's] latest novel... gives the impression of being an amputee. It appears to possess ghost limbs--characters and ideas from earlier novels--and it doesn't seem to be aware that it is mistaking these spectral appendages for real ones.
Unfavorable Kirkus Reviews
Where is the author of Waiting for the Barbarians and Disgrace, now that we need him most? [1 Jul 2005, p.700]
Unfavorable Washington Post Ron Charles
[It's] no disgrace, but it's a disappointment.

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