The handmaid's tale - A review.
- mindCupcake
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The handmaid's tale - A review.
Without a doubt, the novel is daring that breaks down all the conventional beliefs of having a perfect story line. Everything is obscure, looking back at the characters. “What made Aunt Lydia the way she is?”, “Is her daughter alive?”, “Where is Luke?”, “Was the commander infertile?”, “Did Moira find her solace in being a prostitute?”, “Was Luke a better man?”, “Why did Janine choose the path she chose?” , “Was the narrator right in trusting ‘mayday’?” and most importantly, “What is the name of the narrator/protagonist of this story?” and it goes on and on.
The story basically revolves around a place that, after killing the sovereign, has its own government, a terrible government where women are way inferior to men and women are forced to be a birthing machine by snatching what they once called ‘Freedom’. This could have created a sad repercussion among feminists but be that as it may, I have mixed feeling about this book.
The story does not lead you forward but at the present and past which are maimed for a treacherous future, yes, some of the explanations were hard to ponder and process but it was necessary to understand the state of democratically impaired society.
I expected the narrator to be brave and so was she, inspiring motivating and also, chic once in a while. But the changes that were brought on her after hearing her handmaid’s partner were tragic. Yes, she had a minute of doubt about what could have been and how things are, but getting accustomed to the obscene just because she was not offered more was the downfall of this book.
And lastly, banning this book out of curriculum, was it a right decision? I can see where all the parents came from but my answer is no. Yes, the novel is graphic, horrendous and filthy somewhere but it is real. According to me, it would be better to expose children to the truth like gender equality, feminism than shielding them with Santa clause and tooth fairy.
Grab a copy, be a little open minded and pour in. You might be surprised with what you can discover, for the truth is blurry from the beginning to the end.
- Fran
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Not sure I would agree with much of your review as IMO this is a truly magnificinet dystopian novel. Not an easy read certainly but I would totally disagree with your description of it as "blurry". Far from banning it I would make it compulsory reading.
(BTW I have moved your review to Sci-Fi & Fantasy sub forum)
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- gali
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I agree. I have read and loved this book.Fran wrote:I presume this review refers to The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood?
Not sure I would agree with much of your review as IMO this is a truly magnificinet dystopian novel. Not an easy read certainly but I would totally disagree with your description of it as "blurry". Far from banning it I would make it compulsory reading.
(BTW I have moved your review to Sci-Fi & Fantasy sub forum)

- erine_sturdevant
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As for me, I loved it. I definitely can relate to wanting to know more because it's an interesting world and a wonderful piece of speculative fiction, particularly today with so many factions wanting a return to more "traditional values" and the political maneuvers of the current administration in the USA. Yet, it's something I think that not just women of a singular time can relate to but everyone at any time. Losing freedoms you once had is something that no one wants so if the reader thinks in this perspective, they might be able to enjoy the novel in a new way.
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The "Historical Notes" part of the book did so much for me! At first I thought it wasn't part of the story line, and was like Atwood's notes for how she came up with the book. I am the type of person to read every part of the book though, so I am so glad I read this over. It answered a lot of questions and made the story even more substantial. I loved this book, through and through. I am so excited to start watching the newly adapted Hulu series!Sparkletime wrote:Much of your review is confusing. Having just finished this novel myself, I think you missed the last bit of it as there's a chapter after where historians in the future are discussing the book and put it greatly in perspective. It answers a lot of your questions. I also think you missed the fact that as the story is told solely from recall of a Handmaiden, it is supposed to be vague and a little jumbled, the way someone telling a tale is at times.
As for me, I loved it. I definitely can relate to wanting to know more because it's an interesting world and a wonderful piece of speculative fiction, particularly today with so many factions wanting a return to more "traditional values" and the political maneuvers of the current administration in the USA. Yet, it's something I think that not just women of a singular time can relate to but everyone at any time. Losing freedoms you once had is something that no one wants so if the reader thinks in this perspective, they might be able to enjoy the novel in a new way.
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But that is not true. The hardest part about writing a review of The Handmaid’s Tale, a book first published in 1986, is how relevant it still is, over 30 years later. And sadly, that comment is not a tribute to Margaret Atwood’s writing ability. It is a condemnation of our society – a society that is still trying to wrest control of women’s bodies from the women themselves, a society in which the separation of Church and State sometimes seems to be hanging by a thread, a society where everyone is concerned about who is listening and watching.
In The Handmaid’s Tale, the government of the US has fallen, and, at least in the region where the book is set, an ultra-religious group has seized control. All second marriages have been declared invalid, the men in them likely killed, the women, if have had children, given a choice between becoming “unwomen” and sent to work in radioactive wastelands or “handmaids”, essentially concubines whose sole purpose is breeding, and the children removed from their parents and given to powerful families in the new government to raise.
The premise here is that fertility rates among men and women have fallen to all-time lows. Very few children are conceived, and a high percentage that are have severe birth defects. Science has been rejected, and the blame for loss of fertility is all placed on women. So if a powerful man’s wife does not conceive, he can get a handmaid.
There are timeless aspects of the story. It is a story about people, how they are flawed, how power corrupts, how people seem either inclined to look for hope or to reject it entirely. The Handmaid’s Tale is one of a will to survive, a strength to find hope, even in terrible circumstances. And that is beautiful.
My only problem with this book are the final two chapters called “Historical Notes” which, while it does show that the society in the book has passed into history and the terrible conditions for women are no longer in existence, still does not really add much to the book for me. The Handmaid’s Tale was powerful all on its own. Now, I will admit to a personal bias against epilogues in general. And at least this one did not make me like the book less, as some have done. But still, if you stop at the Historical Notes, you are not really missing anything.
I would recommend this book to just about anyone. When my daughter is older, I will encourage her to read it. I can only hope that it will not seem quite so contemporary then.
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