Gliff
Overview
Gliff takes place in a near future Britain where two siblings, Briar and Rose, find themselves classed as “unverifiables” and pushed to the edges of society. After returning home to find a red line painted around their house, they are forced into hiding. As they try to survive in a hostile system built on surveillance, exclusion and control, they encounter unlikely allies, a horse called Gliff, and small acts of resistance that become increasingly important.
Writing & Voice
We found Smith’s writing playful, inventive and full of linguistic energy. Words, meanings and misunderstandings are woven into the story itself. The prose often asks us to slow down and think, but it never loses sight of the emotional core provided by Briar and Rose.
Content & Perspective
The novel follows Briar’s perspective as the siblings navigate a world where status determines whether people are protected or erased. Smith reveals information gradually, allowing us to piece together how this society works while sharing the children’s confusion and uncertainty. The result feels unsettling because so much of it seems only a short distance from reality.
Themes
Gliff explores identity, language, belonging and power. It asks who gets to define what is normal, valuable or acceptable. The novel is also concerned with resistance, showing how kindness, curiosity and imagination can survive even within systems designed to suppress them.
What Worked
- Inventive use of language that rewards close reading.
- Compelling young protagonists whose relationship drives the story.
- A believable dystopian world rooted in present day anxieties.
Minor Quibbles
- The experimental style may not suit every reader.
- Some aspects of the world are deliberately left unexplained.
Final Thoughts
Smith turns questions about language and identity into a tense, humane adventure, creating a dystopian novel that feels both strange and alarmingly familiar.
Rating: ★★★★½ / 5

