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Loading... The Handmaid's Tale: A Novelby Margaret Atwood
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I liked this one a lot more than Oryx and Crake! Reading them one after the other, though, you can really see are a lot of similarities in the structures of the books. Still, you know, creepy dystopian future, of course I like it. I really enjoyed the academic-style epilogue, too. ( )I've dreaded and put off reading this book for many years. And what an amazing novel I missed reading for so long. And yet ... "I wish this story were different. I wish it were more civilized. I wish it showed me in a better light, if not happier, then at least more active, less hesitant, less distracted by trivia. I wish it had more shape. I wish it were about love, or about sudden realizations important to one's life, or even about sunsets, birds, rainstorms, or snow....By telling you anything at all I'm at least believing in you, I believe you're there, I believe you into being. Because I'm telling you this story I will your existence. I tell, therefore you are." I was drawn in from the profound writer's art from the first paragraph. The world already has many reviews of The Handmaid's Tale, and mine can add only that this is a must read and even more powerfully relevant today than when written 25 years ago. I find it extremely disturbing that I finished reading this book on the 25th anniversary of Bhopal. The messages and warnings found in this book sync up perfectly with that catastrophe: chemicals that leaked into the atmosphere making the environment around it poisonous, increased sterility, mass death...all that horrible stuff you read about but it never happens to you. This books shows you what might happen if it happened to us all. This book follows Offred, a Handmaid. She must deal with being nothing more than a "womb on two legs". It sounds horrible, and it is. Whereas we live in a very liberal time now, this book is very conservative. The Bible is the focal point of their society, but it has been twisted by the rulers, allowing them to manipulate the very creed they claim to obey. Those who don't follow this new "religion" are killed. The human population is dying off and those who stand in the way of renewing the population must be eliminated. There were a lot of horrible things that happened in this book. Some parts actually gave me the symptoms one experiences when one is afraid (high heart rate, fast breathing, etc). But I think the scariest part is the end. Spoiler Ahead It worked. Using the Handmaids renewed the population, taking the human race out of dark age featured in The Handmaid's Tale and bringing it back to a society like present times. The ending makes you question your views about the entire novel. Was it okay, then? After all, it was a severe situation. In this particular case, do the ends justify the means? End Spoiler There was also "freedom from". As one person points out in the novel, they used to have the freedom to work and be independent. Now they have the freedom from work, sexual assault, poverty. "In the days of anarchy, it was freedom to. Now you are being given freedom from. Don't underrate it." It's frightening how in some passages like this, I almost found myself agreeing with what was taking place. It makes me wonder how easy it would be for something like this to happen. Could we really allow ourselves to be brainwashed like this? I would recommend this book to anyone. It's one of those books that just makes you sit back and think hard about your entire belief system. And on top of that, it's not a horrible story :) Strange but interesting, kinda depressing. Ends very abruptly. It was just ok. A strange book and if I wasnt reading it for a bookclub discussion I might have given up. The first half of the book was very hard going. Flat prose and little dialogue. Whilst I appreciate this is in part due to the nature of the story it doesn’t make it any easy for the reader. As more characters are introduced it becomes an easier read but never overly enjoyable. The story paints a bleak picture of the future, of women used solely as receptacles for new life in Atwood’s clinical and isolated world. The novel conjures up interesting ideas but the story in itself comes across as dry and depressing. Considering the book is 20 years old, there isnt any jarring displacement in terms of technology and there are some topical comments on environmental issues which is impressive given its age. Saying all that, it’s just not a Utopia I envisonaged.
As a cautionary tale, Atwood's novel lacks the direct, chilling plausibility of Nineteen Eighty-Four and Brave New World. It warns against too much: heedless sex, excessive morality, chemical and nuclear pollution. All of these may be worthwhile targets, but such a future seems more complicated than dramatic. But Offred's narrative is fascinating in a way that transcends tense and time: the record of an observant soul struggling against a harsh, mysterious world. How sad for postfeminists that one does not feel for Offred-June half as much as one did for Winston Smith, no hero either but at any rate imaginable. It seems harsh to say again of a poet's novel - so hard to put down, in part so striking - that it lacks imagination, but that, I fear, is the problem. It's a bleak world that Margaret Atwood opens up for us in her new novel, ''The Handmaid's Tale'' - how bleak and even terrifying we will not fully realize until the story's final pages. But the sensibility through which we view this world is infinitely rich and abundant. And that's why Miss Atwood has succeeded with her anti-Utopian novel where most practitioners of this Orwellian genre have tended to fail.
References to this work on external resources.
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Cults and new religious movements in literature and popular culture |
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:24 -0400)
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