I
read my first e-book, The Testaments, by
Margaret Atwood, for my book club. I had recently read/re-read The Handmaid’s Tale, in hard copy, borrowed from the library, in
preparation. It was high time I tried checking out an e-book, and now it’s the
only way to check out a book, but I did it with some fumbling and trepidation. For
the past couple of weeks, there are so many new sign-ins and passwords. I had
to change my Facebook password, due to a recent surge of hacking. While some
kinds of phone calls have stopped, I’m now being notified, in the voice of
A.I., of lots of cash prizes I’ve won. The hackers and scammers have already discovered
new opportunities and pounced on new
vulnerable prey. That potential for doing harm and being harmed constant in humans is part of the plot
of Testaments.
It
was fascinating to re-encounter certain characters from The Handmaid’s Tale and meet the new ones. I appreciated the
connections in structure between the two novels—testimony, academic lecture.
And I heard the feminism, in waves, the sad wisdom, and both the awareness and
lack of awareness in the young:
The Founders and the
older Aunts had edges to them. They’d been moulded in an age before Gilead,
they’d had struggles we had been spared, and these struggles had ground off the
softness that might once have been there. But we hadn’t been forced to undergo
such ordeals. We’d been protected, we hadn’t needed to deal with the harshness
of the world at large. We were the beneficiaries of the sacrifices made by the
forbears. We were constantly reminded of this and told to be grateful for the absence
of an unknown quantity. I’m afraid we did not fully appreciate the extent to which
those of Aunt Lydia’s generation had been hardened in the fire. They had a
ruthlessness abut them that we lacked.
I
appreciated the complexity of some of the characters, the gray areas in the
thinking. Like the “grey market” (not black market) for desired commodities.
While this novel lays out a parallel history to our own, and an alternate present and
presumed future, it could not have anticipated the current coronavirus crisis. Yet
there is fever, there is fake news. And the ending made me cry.
2 comments:
I'm enjoying your reviews! Keep 'em coming, please. Risa
It's been years since I read The Handmaid's Tale, and I've been meaning for some time to go back and re-read it, partly because I loved it and partly for the same reason as you here: in preparation to read The Testaments. Right now, I have enough time to read blogs and poetry - but someday soon, perhaps more. (sigh) I'm sorry you cried at the end, but that's such a true human connection that I also rejoice for you. Stay connected!
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