The Handmaid's Tale

My rating

5 / 5

Self-Purchased copy

Author

Margaret Atwood

Publisher

Penguin Random House

Genre

Dystopian/Speculative Fiction

Number of Pages

320

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Summary

This is the story of Offred, a handmaid, living in America. A handmaid is a woman whose sole purpose of existence is to produce children for the high commanders in The Republic of Gilead. The organization of this Republic is such that a handful men have all the power.

The interaction night between the commander and the handmaid is called the ceremony and is conducted in the Commander’s Wife's presence. Refuse to co-operate and, they would be hanged at the Wall or, worse, sent into the gutters to die a slow and painful death exposed to life-threatening chemicals and radiation. In between all this unimaginable cruelty in her world, Offred needs to keep looking for her daughter and husband, living in the hope that they are still alive.

Novels By Margaret Atwood

My Review

This chilling summary should explain the context of the book very clearly. The narrative belongs to Offred; she is telling her story. This book isn’t just some make-believe story. The author made a systematic study of the society through astute observations. Infertility was on the rise, and this system was the solution. The situation was a reality many years ago and sadly is still rampant in some parts of the world. Women were and are still considered by many as a means of reproduction, nothing more.

Atwood creates a mind-numbing atmosphere that will provoke your thinking and create unforgettable, haunting images of the handmaid and her dire circumstances. I cannot forget the dialog between Offred and her commander when she boldly dares to ask him- why? Why did you do this to women? Make them quit their jobs, own no property, and confine them to homely roles, so they depend on men? He says – “There was nothing for men to do. There was nothing to work for, nothing to fight for. You know what they were complaining about the most? The inability to feel.”

You cannot but ask- What is this compelling necessity that brought society to these levels? There was even a training institute with Aunts following Hitlerism running the place for fertile women where they were taught all the intricacies of living a subdued life sacrificed to breeding.

The novel's writing is brilliant, no doubt, but sometimes it got too abstruse and heavy for me. But my favorite part was the portrayal of the characters. It was beyond brilliant. I felt the Offred’s fears and disorientation, Serena Joy’s anguish, Commander Fred’s genuine kindness, Nick’s audacity, and Aunt Lydia’s brute force.

Poetry and Short Stotries by Margaret Atwood

I got so involved and was so shocked that I had to remind myself this novel is Fiction. The horrendous and inhuman living conditions described will send a chill down the stiffest spines. I felt real pain for Offred when finally, in her story, she accepted defeat and said- “all I want to do is keep on living. For that, I resign my body freely to the use of others.”

At the end of my copy of the book, there was the transcription of a History lecture based on the novel, where historians were verifying this story's trueness, and the claims surprisingly mentioned the existence of such a republic and its citizens in the past. The transcription ends with a remarkable conclusion by the speaker, “The past is great darkness, and filled with echoes. Voices may reach us from it, but what they say to us is imbued with the obscurity of the matrix out of which they come, and try as we may, we cannot always decipher them precisely in the clearer light of our own day”.

Who Should Read This

I recommend this classic only to adult readers beyond 18, owing to adult themes of torture, sex, and rape.

Final Verdict

If you want to be zapped by a story and shocked into the realization of real issues faced by real women, read this story. I rate it five out of five stars, obviously, because it does the job a book is meant to do- it holds your attention throughout.

Happy reading!

Margaret Atwood

Margaret Atwood's books have been published in over thirty-five countries. She is the author of more than forty works of fiction, poetry, critical essays and books for children.  Her novels include Bodily Harm, Cat's Eye, The Robber Bride, Alias Grace, which won the Giller Prize in Canada, and the Premio Mondello in Italy; The Blind Assassin, winner of the 2000 Booker prize; and Orynx and Crake. Margaret Atwood lives in Toronto with writer Graeme Gibson. They are the joint Honorary Presidents of the Rare Bird Club of BirdLife  International. 


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