Book Review – The Slowworm’s Song by Andrew Miller

About the Book

Book cover of The Slowworm's Song by Andrew Miller

An ex-soldier and recovering alcoholic living quietly in Somerset, Stephen Rose has just begun to form a bond with Maggie, the daughter he barely knows, when he receives a summons – to an inquiry in Belfast about an incident during the Troubles, which he hoped he had long outdistanced. Now, to testify about it could wreck his fragile relationship with Maggie. And if he loses her, he loses everything.

He decides instead to write her an account of his life – a confession, a defence, a love letter. Also a means of buying time. But as time runs out, the day comes when he must face again what happened in that distant summer of 1982.

Format: Paperback (288 pages) Publisher: Sceptre
Publication date: 19th January 2023 [2022] Genre: Contemporary Fiction

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My Review

The Slowworm’s Song is one of the books by Andrew Miller I chose to be part of my Backlist Burrow reading challenge; the other is Pure which I hope to read soon.

Moving between past and present, Stephen recalls events in his life. Some are joyful, such as his first meeting with Evie, the woman who became his wife. ‘We didn’t speak – I’m sure we didn’t speak at all that night – but we had noticed each other and that was enough. You wake to somebody. You feel them wake to you. The first moment is so small.’ Other events are not joyful, or small.

It takes some time before we learn the details of the pivotal event that took place during his time as a young soldier in Northern Ireland. It’s as if he is putting off the moment at which he has to set it down because then it will be out there and cannot be taken back. When it’s revealed, it is shocking in nature and its consequences for the people involved. The incident is something he has kept to himself for over twenty years, unwilling to have anyone else share the burden of knowing about it. ‘I would attend to it in the dark, my secret illness.’ However, the fact that a momentary lapse for which he cannot forgive himself has weighed on Stephen’s mind for so long meant he retained my sympathy.

The author effortlessly takes us inside the mind of Stephen. He’s torn between his desire to reveal the truth in his own way, conscious of the inevitability that it will come out at the inquiry, and his fear that Maggie, when she learns about his role in the incident, will decide to sever all contact with him, just when they have begun to build a relationship. ‘Maggie, I know I’m labouring this but I want you to know I was once someone others could speak well of. That I could do things without making a mess of them…’

The Slowworm’s Song is a quietly powerful book about secrets, guilt, the courage to face up to your past and the gift of forgiveness.

In three words: Moving, insightful, compelling
Try something similar: Perfume River by Robert Olen Butler


About the Author

Author Andrew Miller

Andrew Miller‘s first novel, Ingenious Pain, was published by Sceptre in 1997 and greeted as the debut of an outstanding new writer. It won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize, the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award and the Grinzane Cavour prize for the best foreign novel published in Italy. He has since written Casanova, Oxygen, which was shortlisted for the Booker Prize and the Whitbread Novel of the Year Award, The Optimists, One Morning Like a Bird, Pure, winner of the Costa Book of the Year, The Crossing and Now We Shall Be Entirely Free, which won the Highland Book Prize and was shortlisted for the Walter Scott Prize. Andrew Miller’s novels have been published in translation in twenty countries. Born in Bristol in 1960, he now lives in Somerset.

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