by Michael Crummy
This book has been getting a lot of acclaim. It was on the short list for the Giller Prize.
This was a very interesting book. It is the story of two young children, living in a bay in Newfoundland who are left orphaned and to fend for themselves when their parents die. The boy is 12 and the girl is younger.
The kids are really innocent and there is no one else around to help them or teach them. The girl doesn't have any idea what to do when she eventually gets her period. Sometimes they sleep together to keep warm... at times they engage in foreplay kind of activities not understanding what it is or why or that it might not be a good idea.
They work really hard and eke out a living, fishing and gardening and collecting berries. A supply ship comes once a year and the boy takes the salted fish harvest to the ship as his father did before. They get some supplies of flower, salt, etc. The supply ship people are concerned about whether they will survive but the boy insists they will try for a year or two
The children buried their parents at sea, a young sister died and she is buried near the family garden. The young girl was around when the baby was born and later hears her mother say she would like to kill herself (post-partum depression). The girl is traumatized by what she saw her mother suffer in the birth. The young girl talks to her sister often.
They have a number of strange adventures... they see a ship stranded in the ice one day. When they go to it they find out all are dead on board, the boy discovers evidence of cannibalism but doesn't tell his sister about this. They take some wood, clothing and other supplies from the ship and take it back to their house.
On another occasion the boy gets ill and they the girl gets very ill. The boy feels she will die but through some chance of fate a ship arrives and a man and woman help to nurse the girl back to health. The man also shows the boy how to use his father's gone to shoot animals and to set traps for animals.
Later another ship arrives, seeking wood for a replacement mast. The leader and his men stay with the boy and girl for a time The crew are quite raunchy, the leader regales the girl with stories of the many countries he has visited. At times the girl and this man spend some time together and the crew suggest they are having sex.... they don't
After they leave the boy and girl go back to their usual lives but one day the boy is almost drowned when a storm comes up when he is fishing. He survives and and as the girl is trying to warm him up they end up having sex.... they have no idea where a baby comes from. The girl thinks there can be virgin births, the boy thinks it might be the boat leader's. As the book ends we learn that the baby girl is told the boy is her uncle.
This was a very interesting story, the language, the descriptions of life at the time, etc. and the portrayal of the two young ones was almost like something from the bible.... Adam and Eve.
This was a beautiful but sad book, powerful and gentle, kind and brutal at times. Very impressive and memorable.
Saturday, 18 January 2020
The Face of a Stranger
by Anne Perry
This is the first in the William Monk series by this author. It is about William Monk, a police detective. The story opens with Monk being in hospital after being injured in a carriage accident. He has lost his memory.
A police officer comes to see him and he does not recall he is a police officer, he thinks he is a criminal. Eventually he recovers enough to go back to work but his memory is still weak. His boss treats him with disdain, accusing him of being aggressive, egotistical, only interested in progressing in his career. Monk is very disturbed to see himself characterized in this manner and fears it might be true. The boss assigns him a young assistant and tells him to solve a high profile case that was being investigated by another officer.
A man of a wealthy family has been found viciously beaten in his apartment. Monk first of all goes to the north of England to meet a sister he doesn't remember. As he meets the family of the dead man and people who knew the young man they all say that he was liked by everyone... if so why was he murdered. Monk sees a cane in the umbrella stand at the man's house and it seems to be familiar to him but why.
The caretaker of the building admits seeing someone enter the building on the night of the murder but the guest went to visit a different tenant.
As the story progresses Monk comes to realize that he visited the dead man on the night he died and he fears that he may be a murderer although he can't imagine why he would do it.
Eventually he figures out that the man's brother murdered him in frustration because the young man was accumulating debts and possibly involved with a financial scam that caused families harm and shame.
The book mentions the inheritance rules in England and the class difference issues. The wealthy people are reluctant to talk to Monk as they consider themselves to be much better than him.
It was an interesting story... I am looking forward to reading the next one in the series to see if he recovers his full memory.
This is the first in the William Monk series by this author. It is about William Monk, a police detective. The story opens with Monk being in hospital after being injured in a carriage accident. He has lost his memory.
A police officer comes to see him and he does not recall he is a police officer, he thinks he is a criminal. Eventually he recovers enough to go back to work but his memory is still weak. His boss treats him with disdain, accusing him of being aggressive, egotistical, only interested in progressing in his career. Monk is very disturbed to see himself characterized in this manner and fears it might be true. The boss assigns him a young assistant and tells him to solve a high profile case that was being investigated by another officer.
A man of a wealthy family has been found viciously beaten in his apartment. Monk first of all goes to the north of England to meet a sister he doesn't remember. As he meets the family of the dead man and people who knew the young man they all say that he was liked by everyone... if so why was he murdered. Monk sees a cane in the umbrella stand at the man's house and it seems to be familiar to him but why.
The caretaker of the building admits seeing someone enter the building on the night of the murder but the guest went to visit a different tenant.
As the story progresses Monk comes to realize that he visited the dead man on the night he died and he fears that he may be a murderer although he can't imagine why he would do it.
Eventually he figures out that the man's brother murdered him in frustration because the young man was accumulating debts and possibly involved with a financial scam that caused families harm and shame.
The book mentions the inheritance rules in England and the class difference issues. The wealthy people are reluctant to talk to Monk as they consider themselves to be much better than him.
It was an interesting story... I am looking forward to reading the next one in the series to see if he recovers his full memory.
Sunday, 22 December 2019
Girl, Woman, Other
by Bernardine Avaristo
This book won the Mann Booker Award this year along with Margaret Atwood and her book The Testament.
It was an interesting book, I like the way the author writes, at times the words seem more like poetry.
The book is about 11 black women, most of them immigrants, and their lives in England and beyond.
As the book goes on we see that the women are all connected in one way or another. The first story is disturbing, it is about a lesbian who gets lured to the U.S. by another woman. They live in an all female commune. The American woman ends up dominating and abusing the British women until she is finally helped to escape by other women in the commune.
Some of the other characters include a playwright who rejects the status quo, a young woman who is raped at 14 and starts to fail in her studies. She finally decides she will have to fight to succeed. One of her teachers encourages her an helps her. She goes on to a successful career in banking. Her teacher started out as a very idealistic well loved teacher but all the bureaucracy that developed in education wore her down and she is now considered something of a joke by the students. One woman has a daughter from IVF and has several people serve as the girls godparents. One girl feels she is not a girl and via the Internet hooks up with an Indian boy who has had a sex change to a girl. The first girl does not want to go through operations to become a man but she does shave her head and have her breasts removed. The girl and the trans boy become lovers. Another girl is shocked when her parents tell her that she is adopted, having been left on a church doorstep. Another woman had a child out of wedlock at 16. Her parents made her give up the child. She grieves the loss of this child and wonders what has become of her. At the end of the book they get connected thanks to a DNA test.
The author does a great job of portraying the experiences, the hopes, fears and disappointments of the women. Sadly many of them are not happy in how their lives have turned out. Several of them are pregnant after one night stands. Understandably there is a lot of discussion about what black people experience in the UK. I guess I feel there was too much of an emphasis on lesbianism, etc. Do that many women really struggle with their sexuality?
I guess I have to say that after reading the book I have to ask, so what? I guess it is partly about the desire to find love and acceptance and that nonstandard relationships are an option. A lot of them were trying to find out their background/roots or felt incomplete because they didn't know their origin. One of the women, the one who had the DNA test is shocked to learn that a small percentage of her DNA is from Africa.
This book won the Mann Booker Award this year along with Margaret Atwood and her book The Testament.
It was an interesting book, I like the way the author writes, at times the words seem more like poetry.
The book is about 11 black women, most of them immigrants, and their lives in England and beyond.
As the book goes on we see that the women are all connected in one way or another. The first story is disturbing, it is about a lesbian who gets lured to the U.S. by another woman. They live in an all female commune. The American woman ends up dominating and abusing the British women until she is finally helped to escape by other women in the commune.
Some of the other characters include a playwright who rejects the status quo, a young woman who is raped at 14 and starts to fail in her studies. She finally decides she will have to fight to succeed. One of her teachers encourages her an helps her. She goes on to a successful career in banking. Her teacher started out as a very idealistic well loved teacher but all the bureaucracy that developed in education wore her down and she is now considered something of a joke by the students. One woman has a daughter from IVF and has several people serve as the girls godparents. One girl feels she is not a girl and via the Internet hooks up with an Indian boy who has had a sex change to a girl. The first girl does not want to go through operations to become a man but she does shave her head and have her breasts removed. The girl and the trans boy become lovers. Another girl is shocked when her parents tell her that she is adopted, having been left on a church doorstep. Another woman had a child out of wedlock at 16. Her parents made her give up the child. She grieves the loss of this child and wonders what has become of her. At the end of the book they get connected thanks to a DNA test.
The author does a great job of portraying the experiences, the hopes, fears and disappointments of the women. Sadly many of them are not happy in how their lives have turned out. Several of them are pregnant after one night stands. Understandably there is a lot of discussion about what black people experience in the UK. I guess I feel there was too much of an emphasis on lesbianism, etc. Do that many women really struggle with their sexuality?
I guess I have to say that after reading the book I have to ask, so what? I guess it is partly about the desire to find love and acceptance and that nonstandard relationships are an option. A lot of them were trying to find out their background/roots or felt incomplete because they didn't know their origin. One of the women, the one who had the DNA test is shocked to learn that a small percentage of her DNA is from Africa.
Wednesday, 4 December 2019
Reproduction
by Ian Williams
This book one the Giller Prize this year. It is written by a poet/writing prof.
The book starts out with a young teenager (Felicia) and an older man (Edgar)meeting in the hospital as their mothers appear on the verge of death. They converse a little to pass the time. The girl's mother dies, the man's mother doesn't.
The girl is an orphan now. She is trying to finish her high school work. The man invites her to live at his place and look after his invalid mother. The man is the head of a company and travels a lot on business. He doesn't seem to have much care for his mother and seems to spend his time drinking an smoking in various hotel rooms. He and the young woman start having sex, he has told her he had a vasectomy. However, in a few months the girl is pregnant. When she tells him she is pregnant he offers to pay for an abortion. He schedules one but she doesn't go through with it. When the man finds this out he unceremoniously fires her and kicks her out of his house.
The book then jumps to the future when the woman and her son Armistice (known as Army) are struggling to survive financially. They end up living in part of the house of a divorced man (Oliver) who is bitter about he was treated by his ex-wife. Army, always aware of being poor cooks up all sorts of schemes for making money, e.g. setting up a barber shop in the garage of the house.
Oliver's kids live in the U.S. with his ex-wife. They come to visit him for the summer. Army really likes the daughter (Heather) but she ignores him. She gets attracted to a guy who works at Walmart(?). In a very disturbing scene in the book she is drugged and gang raped by the Walmart guy and some of his friends. She ends up getting pregnant. Her mother is furious with her ex for letting this happen and send the girl back to Ontario to have the baby to avoid scandal.
At one point Edgar contacts Felicia and offers her money, initially $10 and $20,000, Felicia always refuses. Eventually he sends her a cheque for more than $100,000 again she refuses. It turns out Edgar is being accused of sexual harassment and it appears he wants Felicia to be a character witness on his behalf. She doesn't agree.
After Heather has her baby Oliver and Felicia take on the baby as their child Heather has named the child Chariot but he is known as Riot, and he is quite a trouble maker. He wants to be a film maker but keeps getting kicked out of school for bad behaviour. Oliver and Felicia don't have a sexual relationship but they do act like a blended family. They never tell Riot who his mother is, but he suspects.
All along Army has asked who his father is but Felicia doesn't tell him. Felicia finds out Edgar is sick with cancer. Army then discovers who his father is and invites him to come live with them as he prepares to die. Felicia and especially Oliver are furious about this. Army's behaviour is not really altruistic. He hopes to get money from Edgar's estate.
When Edgar dies he leaves most of his estate to charity, his house to Felicia and a mixed tape of music for Army.
I found the names Armistice (Peace)/Army and Chariot/Riot interesting. The original names are quite powerful, in a good way but the nicknames are vary aggressive.
This was an interesting story about an unconventional family. I enjoyed it.
This book one the Giller Prize this year. It is written by a poet/writing prof.
The book starts out with a young teenager (Felicia) and an older man (Edgar)meeting in the hospital as their mothers appear on the verge of death. They converse a little to pass the time. The girl's mother dies, the man's mother doesn't.
The girl is an orphan now. She is trying to finish her high school work. The man invites her to live at his place and look after his invalid mother. The man is the head of a company and travels a lot on business. He doesn't seem to have much care for his mother and seems to spend his time drinking an smoking in various hotel rooms. He and the young woman start having sex, he has told her he had a vasectomy. However, in a few months the girl is pregnant. When she tells him she is pregnant he offers to pay for an abortion. He schedules one but she doesn't go through with it. When the man finds this out he unceremoniously fires her and kicks her out of his house.
The book then jumps to the future when the woman and her son Armistice (known as Army) are struggling to survive financially. They end up living in part of the house of a divorced man (Oliver) who is bitter about he was treated by his ex-wife. Army, always aware of being poor cooks up all sorts of schemes for making money, e.g. setting up a barber shop in the garage of the house.
Oliver's kids live in the U.S. with his ex-wife. They come to visit him for the summer. Army really likes the daughter (Heather) but she ignores him. She gets attracted to a guy who works at Walmart(?). In a very disturbing scene in the book she is drugged and gang raped by the Walmart guy and some of his friends. She ends up getting pregnant. Her mother is furious with her ex for letting this happen and send the girl back to Ontario to have the baby to avoid scandal.
At one point Edgar contacts Felicia and offers her money, initially $10 and $20,000, Felicia always refuses. Eventually he sends her a cheque for more than $100,000 again she refuses. It turns out Edgar is being accused of sexual harassment and it appears he wants Felicia to be a character witness on his behalf. She doesn't agree.
After Heather has her baby Oliver and Felicia take on the baby as their child Heather has named the child Chariot but he is known as Riot, and he is quite a trouble maker. He wants to be a film maker but keeps getting kicked out of school for bad behaviour. Oliver and Felicia don't have a sexual relationship but they do act like a blended family. They never tell Riot who his mother is, but he suspects.
All along Army has asked who his father is but Felicia doesn't tell him. Felicia finds out Edgar is sick with cancer. Army then discovers who his father is and invites him to come live with them as he prepares to die. Felicia and especially Oliver are furious about this. Army's behaviour is not really altruistic. He hopes to get money from Edgar's estate.
When Edgar dies he leaves most of his estate to charity, his house to Felicia and a mixed tape of music for Army.
I found the names Armistice (Peace)/Army and Chariot/Riot interesting. The original names are quite powerful, in a good way but the nicknames are vary aggressive.
This was an interesting story about an unconventional family. I enjoyed it.
Saturday, 16 November 2019
Telling Tales
by Ann Cleeves
This is the second book in the author's series featuring the Detective Inspector Vera. Coincidentally they played this story on TV recently. The TV version varied a little at the beginning and also in whodunnit. However for the most part the stories were similar.
The book is about Vera and her assistant being brought in to re-open a murder investigation. A teenager was killed. The girl's father's lover was convicted of the crime but always maintains her innocence. She commits suicide in prison. At about the same time it comes out that new evidence has come forward that exonerates her.
Vera finds that the local police perhaps jumped too quickly to their conclusion. The murder victim had one girl who was her closest friend. It was this girl who found her body. The girl's brother, who had been estranged from the family returns to town and is killed soon after.
Eventually it comes out that it was the young girl's mother who killed both the teenager and her own son. She killed the teenager because she was going to blackmail the woman's husband and she kills her son because he is going to accuse his father of the murder.
It was an interesting read. You don't really get much insight into how Vera thinks or feels about things but she is considered gruff in the book, as she is portrayed in the TV series.
This is the second book in the author's series featuring the Detective Inspector Vera. Coincidentally they played this story on TV recently. The TV version varied a little at the beginning and also in whodunnit. However for the most part the stories were similar.
The book is about Vera and her assistant being brought in to re-open a murder investigation. A teenager was killed. The girl's father's lover was convicted of the crime but always maintains her innocence. She commits suicide in prison. At about the same time it comes out that new evidence has come forward that exonerates her.
Vera finds that the local police perhaps jumped too quickly to their conclusion. The murder victim had one girl who was her closest friend. It was this girl who found her body. The girl's brother, who had been estranged from the family returns to town and is killed soon after.
Eventually it comes out that it was the young girl's mother who killed both the teenager and her own son. She killed the teenager because she was going to blackmail the woman's husband and she kills her son because he is going to accuse his father of the murder.
It was an interesting read. You don't really get much insight into how Vera thinks or feels about things but she is considered gruff in the book, as she is portrayed in the TV series.
Tuesday, 22 October 2019
The Giver of Stars
by Jojo Moyes
This book is supposedly based on real events.
It takes place in Kentucky in the depression area. The story starts with a young English woman who longs to escape her family. She marries a handsome young American who has come to England. Everyone thinks it will be an ideal marriage.
The young man is travelling with his father. On the voyage back to America the newlyweds share a cabin with the man's father. Why?? The young man is shy about doing anything amourous with his father nearby.
The young woman had imagined she would be going to a city in America but she is actually going into the Kentucky mountains. The father-in-law runs a coal mine. He treats his employees as slaves and safety measures are lacking.
When they arrive in Kentucky the couple live with the husband's father. As the father sleeps in the next room the young man again declines intimacy. The young woman is puzzled.
One day some woman announce that the President's wife has started a mobile library program to help promote literacy in America. They are looking for women to ride into the mountains to take books to people. The young bride feels she has nothing to do and despite the objection of her father-in-law she volunteers to be one of the Librarians.
She then gets involved with a group of women who will become her close friends:Margery, the daughter of a moonshiner, member of one family in a decades long feud with another local family.
She is a very independent woman and teaches the other women the routes through the mountains. Other members of the group include Izzy a young crippled girl and a black girl who trained in a black library and is the administrator of the collection.
The women ride through all weather to deliver their books and their service is much appreciated. Alice, the main character, initially feels an outsider but through her work is welcomed by the people she visits. She sees how tough life is for the mountain people and befriends them, for e.g. reading to a dying man. Alice starts working longer and longer hours as she cannot bear to go home. One day she gives some dolls that belonged to her deceased mother-in-law to some poor local girls. When the father-in-law discovers what she has done he beats her up. Bruised and battered she leave the family home and goes to live with Margery.
Margery is carrying on an anonymous campaign warning locals that Alice's father wants to buy they out of their property to expand his mining operations. When there is a flood one of the mine's holding ponds burst and it is Margery who tells people about this. This activity and the fact that she is housing his daughter-in-law infuriates the father-in-law and he is doing everything he can to discredit Margery and shut down the library service. Most of the books and magazines they deliver are classics, comic books, cookbooks etc. There is one "facutal" book about sex information . It turns out to be a popular read in the community. Alice's father-in-law accuses the librarians of corrupting the community by distributing this book. Alice is so naive she doesn't even know what it means to have sex and that it is unusual that her marriage has never been consummated.
Then, one day a man, from the family Margery's family had the feud with, is found dead with a library book on his chest. She is arrested for murder even though she is pregnant (out of wedlock).
The trial starts and it appears she will be found guilty.
However, Alice's husband suggests to her that the dead man's daughters, who are reclusive, should be interviewed. One of the girls, who is heavily pregnant, comes to the trial and tells the judge that her father had a library book and was anxious to return it to town. She speculates he must have slipped on the ice and died from injuries from the fall.
When asked why she didn't report her father missing it is obvious she did not like him (is it he who got her pregnant)? Ironically the book the father was found with was Little Women. Based on this testimony Margery is released and reunited with her baby and her lover.
The book starts with Margery encountering the girls father. He tries to attack Margery. In defence she hits him with a book and rides off as fast as she can. She doesn't check to see if he got up....
The book has a happily ever after ending.... Alice's marriage is annulled. Her husband marries another woman, Alice marries a local man she has fallen in love with and Margery marries her lover. The black Librarian moves back to the city where she worked as a librarian with her brother who was injured in the mine (and abandoned by the mine owner).
The puzzling part of the book is why Alice's first husband, who seemed to marry her willingly, then seemed to have no interest in her sexually. I thought he might be gay but he married another woman. Perhaps his second wife would initially not have been acceptable to his father, but after all that happened the old man was happy to have a compliant daughter-in-law.
The story was action packed. The author did a great job of describing the hardships of travelling through the mountains in all seasons and the lives of the locals. A very interesting read.
The Giver of Stars by Amy Lowell
Hold your soul open for my welcoming.
Let the quiet of your spirit bathe me
With is clean and rippled coolness.,
That, loose-limbed and weary, I find rest,
Outstretched upon your peace, as on a bed of ivory.
This book is supposedly based on real events.
It takes place in Kentucky in the depression area. The story starts with a young English woman who longs to escape her family. She marries a handsome young American who has come to England. Everyone thinks it will be an ideal marriage.
The young man is travelling with his father. On the voyage back to America the newlyweds share a cabin with the man's father. Why?? The young man is shy about doing anything amourous with his father nearby.
The young woman had imagined she would be going to a city in America but she is actually going into the Kentucky mountains. The father-in-law runs a coal mine. He treats his employees as slaves and safety measures are lacking.
When they arrive in Kentucky the couple live with the husband's father. As the father sleeps in the next room the young man again declines intimacy. The young woman is puzzled.
One day some woman announce that the President's wife has started a mobile library program to help promote literacy in America. They are looking for women to ride into the mountains to take books to people. The young bride feels she has nothing to do and despite the objection of her father-in-law she volunteers to be one of the Librarians.
She then gets involved with a group of women who will become her close friends:Margery, the daughter of a moonshiner, member of one family in a decades long feud with another local family.
She is a very independent woman and teaches the other women the routes through the mountains. Other members of the group include Izzy a young crippled girl and a black girl who trained in a black library and is the administrator of the collection.
The women ride through all weather to deliver their books and their service is much appreciated. Alice, the main character, initially feels an outsider but through her work is welcomed by the people she visits. She sees how tough life is for the mountain people and befriends them, for e.g. reading to a dying man. Alice starts working longer and longer hours as she cannot bear to go home. One day she gives some dolls that belonged to her deceased mother-in-law to some poor local girls. When the father-in-law discovers what she has done he beats her up. Bruised and battered she leave the family home and goes to live with Margery.
Margery is carrying on an anonymous campaign warning locals that Alice's father wants to buy they out of their property to expand his mining operations. When there is a flood one of the mine's holding ponds burst and it is Margery who tells people about this. This activity and the fact that she is housing his daughter-in-law infuriates the father-in-law and he is doing everything he can to discredit Margery and shut down the library service. Most of the books and magazines they deliver are classics, comic books, cookbooks etc. There is one "facutal" book about sex information . It turns out to be a popular read in the community. Alice's father-in-law accuses the librarians of corrupting the community by distributing this book. Alice is so naive she doesn't even know what it means to have sex and that it is unusual that her marriage has never been consummated.
Then, one day a man, from the family Margery's family had the feud with, is found dead with a library book on his chest. She is arrested for murder even though she is pregnant (out of wedlock).
The trial starts and it appears she will be found guilty.
However, Alice's husband suggests to her that the dead man's daughters, who are reclusive, should be interviewed. One of the girls, who is heavily pregnant, comes to the trial and tells the judge that her father had a library book and was anxious to return it to town. She speculates he must have slipped on the ice and died from injuries from the fall.
When asked why she didn't report her father missing it is obvious she did not like him (is it he who got her pregnant)? Ironically the book the father was found with was Little Women. Based on this testimony Margery is released and reunited with her baby and her lover.
The book starts with Margery encountering the girls father. He tries to attack Margery. In defence she hits him with a book and rides off as fast as she can. She doesn't check to see if he got up....
The book has a happily ever after ending.... Alice's marriage is annulled. Her husband marries another woman, Alice marries a local man she has fallen in love with and Margery marries her lover. The black Librarian moves back to the city where she worked as a librarian with her brother who was injured in the mine (and abandoned by the mine owner).
The puzzling part of the book is why Alice's first husband, who seemed to marry her willingly, then seemed to have no interest in her sexually. I thought he might be gay but he married another woman. Perhaps his second wife would initially not have been acceptable to his father, but after all that happened the old man was happy to have a compliant daughter-in-law.
The story was action packed. The author did a great job of describing the hardships of travelling through the mountains in all seasons and the lives of the locals. A very interesting read.
The Giver of Stars by Amy Lowell
Hold your soul open for my welcoming.
Let the quiet of your spirit bathe me
With is clean and rippled coolness.,
That, loose-limbed and weary, I find rest,
Outstretched upon your peace, as on a bed of ivory.
The Testaments
by Margaret Atwood
This is the sequel to The Handmaid's Tale, it was just announced as a joint winner of the Mann Booker Prize this year.
I recently re-read The Handmaid's Tale. I found it interesting, and disturbing yet again. The ideas Atwood presents in this book in terms of the rituals, sex scenes with the commanders, the handmaids and the wives are absolutely chilling.
I was wondering how she would follow up the first book and I have to say The Testaments was different, perhaps even better in some ways. It is the story of three women, whose lives are intertwined. It is a story and a bit of a mystery novel. We find that a child was secreted away from Gilead and taken to Canada. The baby's picture is plastered around Gilead and the baby is being vigourously sought as it would be a coup if Gilead could recapture her. There are women called angels who go into Canada, supposedly to preach about Gilead but they are actually spies seeking information about the baby and about people who help women and children escape from Gilead.
One of the characters is a young woman who is shocked at the death of the people she thought were her parents. She is shocked to learn that she is that baby. We also meet a young girl who is basically ignored by her father and his new wife, especially when they have a child by a handmaid. She is being groomed to be married but convinces the officials, including Aunt Lydia that she is committed to life as an Aunt. She does not want to get married. Another friend of hers also becomes an aunt (she was traumatized by being sexually abused by her father, a highly regarded dentist). We meet Aunt Lydia who is probably the most powerful of the aunts and learn that Gilead has records of all women, children born, etc. Aunt Lydia is secretly writing a journal about what has happened in Gilead. If she was found out she would be hung.
As the book progresses we learn that the main character in Handmaid's Tale (Offred), was able to escape to Canada. The daughter she had with her husband also survived. At the end of the novel Offred and her two children are re-united. Eventually the notes written by Aunt Lydia are found but no one knows that she is the one who wrote them.
I enjoyed the way Atwood developed the story and how the various people's lives intertwined. I am not sure why Aunt Lydia did what she did.
The books starts with the person who is Aunt Lydia and other professional women being rounded up. In life she was a respected judge. Rather than fighting she decides to commit to becoming part of the Gilead administration. This was the most disturbing and intriguing part of the story to me, that someone who was a defender of the law and should be committed to human rights would abandon all that to survive and in fact become an architect and perpetrator of the vile Gilead empire. And, in the end why did she write these notes? To apologize for what she was part of? As a lesson for the future?
This is the sequel to The Handmaid's Tale, it was just announced as a joint winner of the Mann Booker Prize this year.
I recently re-read The Handmaid's Tale. I found it interesting, and disturbing yet again. The ideas Atwood presents in this book in terms of the rituals, sex scenes with the commanders, the handmaids and the wives are absolutely chilling.
I was wondering how she would follow up the first book and I have to say The Testaments was different, perhaps even better in some ways. It is the story of three women, whose lives are intertwined. It is a story and a bit of a mystery novel. We find that a child was secreted away from Gilead and taken to Canada. The baby's picture is plastered around Gilead and the baby is being vigourously sought as it would be a coup if Gilead could recapture her. There are women called angels who go into Canada, supposedly to preach about Gilead but they are actually spies seeking information about the baby and about people who help women and children escape from Gilead.
One of the characters is a young woman who is shocked at the death of the people she thought were her parents. She is shocked to learn that she is that baby. We also meet a young girl who is basically ignored by her father and his new wife, especially when they have a child by a handmaid. She is being groomed to be married but convinces the officials, including Aunt Lydia that she is committed to life as an Aunt. She does not want to get married. Another friend of hers also becomes an aunt (she was traumatized by being sexually abused by her father, a highly regarded dentist). We meet Aunt Lydia who is probably the most powerful of the aunts and learn that Gilead has records of all women, children born, etc. Aunt Lydia is secretly writing a journal about what has happened in Gilead. If she was found out she would be hung.
As the book progresses we learn that the main character in Handmaid's Tale (Offred), was able to escape to Canada. The daughter she had with her husband also survived. At the end of the novel Offred and her two children are re-united. Eventually the notes written by Aunt Lydia are found but no one knows that she is the one who wrote them.
I enjoyed the way Atwood developed the story and how the various people's lives intertwined. I am not sure why Aunt Lydia did what she did.
The books starts with the person who is Aunt Lydia and other professional women being rounded up. In life she was a respected judge. Rather than fighting she decides to commit to becoming part of the Gilead administration. This was the most disturbing and intriguing part of the story to me, that someone who was a defender of the law and should be committed to human rights would abandon all that to survive and in fact become an architect and perpetrator of the vile Gilead empire. And, in the end why did she write these notes? To apologize for what she was part of? As a lesson for the future?
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