Thursday, 24 February 2022

The Handmaid's Tale - Bleak but brilliant!

I can't quite believe it has taken me so long to read The Handmaid's Tale, by Margaret Atwood. Shortlisted for the Man Booker in 1986, this dystopian tale is set in The Republic of Gilead, a great swathe of what was once the USA. The book is narrated by Offred, a woman who has been ripped away from her husband and daughter and been trained as a Handmaid for one of the ruling "Commanders".  Her sole role, as a fertile woman, is to produce children for childless couples of the people in power in this totalitarian state which was created in response to increasing levels of infertility in the population. Did she have a choice? Well, the choice was humiliating subjugation as a Handmaid or be shipped off to "the colonies" where life expectancy is short-lived. Now assigned to Fred Waterford (hence, Offred), we sit inside her head as she tries to stay alive and sane while being raped each month by her Commander in the presence of his wife, in the hope that she will conceive. Should the child be taken to full term, and survive the birth, the Waterfords will raise the child as their own, and the Handmaid will be shipped off to a different couple and repeat the process as Ofstephen, Ofbill, or Ofwhoever. This is a shocking and bleak tale, where power has totally corrupted those who had it. No one can be trusted. No one is safe. And the only escape is suicide. However, there are lighter moments as Offred reminisces about her life before Gilead, and then also finds comfort in her relationship with another man from the household. This book is very different to the recent TV series. It is slow paced, and almost dream like in quality, but it is heart wrenching and gut punching at the same time. The daily cruelty and dehumanising of people is unpalatable, but, scarily, doesn't feel that far fetched in today's world. Not a comfortable read, but one that will stay with you.

My STAR rating: FIVE.

Length: 324 print pages.

Price I paid: free, borrowed from the library.

Formats available: print, audio download, MP3CD, ebook.

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