Friday, 23 March 2018

The Power - turning the world upside down!

In this disturbing novel, teenage girls develop the ability to deliver electric shocks ... which becomes known as The Power. Men fear this phenomenon and try to seek ways to control those exhibiting this power. However, when the girls discover that they can trigger the ability in older women, the men lose any control they previously had, and things start to go terribly wrong. Society begins to unravel and the world becomes a very different place. Politics, religion and the criminal underworld are taken over by women, with alarming results. The centuries of male domination and unfair and violent treatment of women comes home to roost as the "gentler" sex  stop being so gentle, and revenge is meted out without mercy. This momentous change is seen through the eyes of several main characters: Allie, a foster kid who was abused by her carers but who has become the focal point of a new religion; Margot, a politician who exploits her position as well as her daughter; Roxy, the daughter of a gangster who is betrayed by her family; and Tunde, a male reporter who sees the writing on the wall as the story unfolds across the world. The Power, by Naomi Alderman is often a tough read, where the premise is, I suppose, that power always corrupts, no matter who holds it. But if women did hold the power, would men be treated so appallingly as women have been throughout history? I would like to think not, which is why I found this book a bit dispiriting at times. It is, however, gripping and the main characters are compelling. I really wanted to find out what happened to them all in the end. This is a book that stays with you, and some parts still give me the shivers. It would be extremely interesting to hear the reaction of men who read this book ... would they recognise the situations the characters find themselves in, and wonder what their fates would be if they were women in today's world?

POPSUGAR Challenge 2018 prompt 15: A book about feminism.

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 352 print pages.
Price I paid: £5.99.
Formats available: print, unabridged audio download, audio CD, ebook.

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