Showing posts with label dystopian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dystopian. Show all posts

Monday, 27 April 2015

LOGAN'S RUN By William F. Nolan and George Clayton Johnson



"The terrifying novel of the 23rd century!" Read for the category, A book set in another country, Logan's Run is set in futuristic American where it's a utopia for some, and a dystopia for other; and nearly everyone has second thoughts on Lastday.

Logan 3 is a Sandman; a Deep Sleep Operative. It's his job to send people to 'sleep' as soon as their palm flower turns black; when they turn 21, however Logan isn't as keen to send himself to sleep when his own palm flower starts blinking black and he knows he's on Lastday. The last runner he chased muttered the word 'sanctuary' just before he died, and Logan begins to believe there might be some truth in the old urban myth. Refusing to end his life at 21, Logan 3 begins the journey to find sanctuary, that's if it even exists.

I have been waiting years to read this book! For three, four years now, I have been trying to find a copy of this elusive book which was actually affordable for my student budget, and finally I have found one.

Everything about this book sets it apart from other sci-fi, dystopian novels. It's like 1984, Brave New World, Handmaid's Tale and every other dystopian novel rolled into one magnificent novel. So easy to read and deeply satisfying when finished.  I love it. I've heard people talk about it negatively, but I honestly cannot see where those opinions can be formed on such a book. It's unique, its original, it's captivating, it's satisfying, what more can I say?

A definite read for both sci-fi kings and novices alike.  The journey beginning at chapter 10 and finishing at chapter 1 is an incredible journey which you can't help but read on, and Nolan's use of characters is a spark of genius which proves that not everyone is who you think they are.


Wednesday, 21 January 2015

THE METHOD By Juli Zeh


Okie dokie! Here we are with the fourth book I have read for the POPSUGAR 2015 Reading Challenge. This time I've read a book to fill the category 'A book originally written in another language'. The Method was originally written in German and the translated into English by Sally-Ann Spencer.

Mia is a scientist in the world run by The Method. Everything about this world is completely health based. Everyone is required to submit various blood tests and urine samples to The Method in an attempt to create an completely illness free human race. Things begin to get a little heated when Mia stops submitting her data. She is now technically a criminal and could be facing a fate worse than death.

Ermm.... I'm not really sure where I should start with reviewing this book. It had the weirdest effect on me, no word of a lie. I found that while reading this, I wasn't particularly hooked, I wasn't gripped to the story line, I didn't even find the book overly special or interesting, but something kept the pages turning. I'm not entirely sure what it was. It could have been the fact that I wanted to make sure it ended right, or I had a slight hint of hope that it might get a little more gripping.

I really, really liked the idea and the structure of the world that Zeh created and I think there is a lot of potential for this to have been a really good book. I felt that the relationships between characters were very confused. As a reader, on many occasions, I wasn't sure whether the writer wanted me to like a character or not.

Over all I think it was an interesting book and a good idea that maybe could have been written down better. Whether or not the German manuscript read better or not, I don't know and unfortunately as I don't speak German, I will never know. I didn't not enjoy this book but I didn't particularly enjoy it either and unfortunately I don't think I'll be reading an of this author's other books in a hurry.

As usual I don't like telling people what they can an can't read. We all have different preferences and this blog is purely my personal opinion. If the synopsis sounds like something you would like to read, go for it. It's only a short book. What have you got to lose?

Sunday, 4 January 2015

THE MAZE RUNNER By James Dashner


Here we go with my second book for the 2015 POPSUGAR reading challenge, this one is heading for the category: A book by an author you've never read before, and it's true! This is the first of Dashner's novels I have ever read, and I must say that after this I wouldn't mind reading a few more.

I've got to admit that I hadn't heard about this book until I say they poster at our local cinema for the new film that recently came out last year. Then browsing through the bookshop I stumbled across a copy, (or rather thousands of copies) and I very nearly didn't buy it. I love the hunger games and when I saw the plug at the bottom about how its 'a must for fans of THE HUNGER GAMES, I was worried that I would be disappointed that it would be a non-story. Compared to the Hunger Games so that it would sell more copies but I thought What the heck and took it to the counter and paid for it.

However I now stand here with my hands held high in surrender and apology to all you Maze Runner fans out there... you were right. This book is amazing and it has indeed left me with a book hangover to such an extent, that I don't know when I'll be able to start the sequel.

Just like it says in the blurb, we begin the story just as confused as Thomas and we stay as confused as he is until starts fighting back and asking questions. From the moment the box open, and Thomas is spewed into the Glade, to the moment he falls asleep at the end, you feel everything that he feels. Basically Thomas has somehow been made to live in a huge concrete square surrounded by walls that seem to be impossibly tall. There are four 'doors', on in each wall but all that seems beyond them is black. We soon learn that the Glade, as it's more commonly known, is the centre of a giant, seemingly unsolvable maze. He is trapped in there with 50 - 60 other teenage boys and there is only one rule: Solve the maze or die. The people before Thomas arrived have been trying to solve the maze for two whole years, so why should his arrival make any difference?

Firstly, I thought that this book was incredibly well written. The idea of creating lab rat style humans is almost unthinkable and I cannot begin to think where I would have started if I were the writer of this book, but Dashner has done an incredible job of making it realistic and believable. There was not a single moment when I stepped back and said 'Whoa! this ain't real'. The author here has managed to find the perfect balance between reality and fantasy, a sometimes very difficult thing to do. As a slight aside, I love the way that each boy is nicknamed after a famous scientist, that tickled me. I loved it.

As usual I talk a little bit about my favourite character so that what I'm going to do now. Newt. Favourite character has to be Newt. He's strong, he's a leader, he's hot and I just think that if I had to be stuck in a giant hostile maze with anyone, it would be Newt. I kinda liked Chuck as well in that annoying little brother sorta way but Newt definitely had to be the one for me.

Certainly one I would recommend to all people great and small who enjoy a good book, and most definitely a book for people who think that reading is ponsey and for girls, because this book could not be further from that assumption. Give it a read, see for yourself and see if you would be strong enough to solve the maze.

Thursday, 1 January 2015

THE WARD By S.L Grey



Happy new year guys! Hope you've had a good book filled year with some incredible books to recommend to people. The Ward is the first book I have read for the POPSUGAR 2015 reading challenge (Checkout the heading up top :) ), and will be filling the category of 'Book you can finish in a day'

This incredibly surreal book was recommended to be by my wonderful friend, colleague and author Rebeccah Giltrow. Having been warned about its graphic content prior to reading this, I attempted to prepare myself for the journey I was about to embark on, but nothing, and I mean NOTHING could prepare me for what lies within these pages.

We begin the story with Lisa; a cosmetic surgery addict, and Josh Farrell; a celebrity photographer who is more commonly known as Farrell. Both these people have ended up in the grimmest of all hospitals; New Hope. Neither can wait to get discharged and every time they come close, a doctor demands they stay. After they try and escape, they find themselves in separate luxury hospital suits labelled 'Client' and 'Donor' and things start to get very weird indeed.

Firstly I have to thank Rebeccah for recommending this book for me and secondly I have to warn you all! This book is not for the meek and/or faint hearted. From about page 50, reading the book gives you the same experience I would imagine you get from a really bad acid trip. Its almost hallucinogenic in places.

I really really enjoyed reading this book and am tempted to read some other books by this author. (well actually, its two writers writing together under one name, Sarah Lotz and Louis Greenberg). Other than that I'm not really sure what I should say about this book. I liked the characters, more so Lisa than Farrell. At times I really did hate Farrell and I found that I tended to side with Lisa more often than not as I found Farrell too judgemental and quick to act on things. I didn't like the way he insisted on assuming power and blamed Lisa for the choices he made. Don't get me wrong, I liked him, he was just an idiot.

This is most definitely not a book for younger readers (due to severe bad language, mild sexual references and graphic violent content), however for those experienced readers looking for something unique and different to change up their reading habits... I think you've found you're book.

I was going to say enjoy, but that doesn't seem like the right word.... more like proceed with caution and always read the fine print.

Monday, 29 December 2014

BEHEMOTH By Scott Westerfeld


Well, here we are. The sequel to Scott Westerfeld's Leviathan which I reviewed two books ago. At the time I said I wouldn't mind reading the next one and so, guess what?! I ordered it from the library and gave it a read.

This time round, we join Alek and Deryn on the run in Istanbul. Deryn is given a top secret mission which doesn't exactly go to plan and Alek and his men attempt to escape the Leviathan now they are technically prisoners of war. This too doesn't go to plan and the team gets slip up rather spectacularly.

Alek finds himself alone and fully in charge of his men for the first time in his life, how will he cope, and how many seemingly bad choices will he make along the way?

I liked the way that this book was so completely different to it predecessor. You knew that it had a book before it and you knew it was part of a bigger picture. It followed the story very well and it wasn't just the same characters in an entirely different book. The linking between the two books is incredibly well done and I say 'Well done Mr Westerfeld!'

There were a couple of odd occasions where I felt a little bit disappointed. Not with the author for the way he'd written the book. But because I felt almost like I had entrusted my friends to him and when something bad happened to them, it was the authors fault. Something inside me really rang out if the author hadn't kept one of his characters safe. This is the first book to ever really make me have that reaction. It was bizarre and took me a while to work out how I felt, but I guess it just goes to show how well Westerfeld linked his characters with his audience.

I really enjoyed reading Behemoth and will no doubt carry on to read the third and final book Goliath in the not too distant future. I found the pace a little slow in places and sometimes it was a little hard to keep reading, yet at other parts of the book, I could hardly bring my self to put it down and go to sleep. I've not been left with too much of a Book Hangover, yet I feel satisfied that I've read a good book. Not as good as the first but never-the-less still a good  read :) What will Goliath bring I wonder?

Tuesday, 9 December 2014

LEVIATHAN By Scott Westerfeld



A good friend of mine recommended this book, but in my awful judgemental ways, I assumed that because my friend is slightly older, that this book would also be a more adult book. So you can imagine my pleasant surprise when I opened the cover to start reading a teen/young adult book.

The world is at war, however this world war is nothing like we would remember it. The Germans and their allies, have developed their Clanker machinery. Tanks, and walkers and mobile military units! Meanwhile, the Brits and their allies have created a vast army of Darwinist fabricated beings. Living warships and ferocious warriors. What would ever happen if these two sides were ever to meet? Well when Austrian Prince Alek has to go on the run after his royal parents are killed, and Deryn disguises herself as a boy to join the British air force, the two meet and things get interesting.

I really enjoyed reading both sides of this story, but the storyline that stood out to me the most was Deryn's. Who doesn't love a young girl disguising herself to achieve her dreams? Yeah the ideas a little corny but sometimes, its the things we know and love that make the best story. I found her character easier to connect to and more relateable. Sometimes it can be a little difficult to empathise with a young prince who has just lost both his parents and is heir to the throne of Austria-Hungary, but a young girl whose dreams of flying are squished my society? That's a little more real.

Don't get me wrong, I loved Alek and his story. Sometimes you need something completely separate to your one circumstances to get you through the day. However, this time round, I needed something a little closer to home and for me, that just happened to be Deryn.

I really, really, really enjoyed the whole Science Vs Nature argument throughout this book and over all it made me think, is there such a big difference between the two? The Natural world is made up of chemical reactions and scientific equations, and surly it is only natural that we should want to invent and build things to make us more powerful and efficient at humans? Yes this is a YA (young adult) book, but maybe its more than that... Maybe its a simple commentary on the similarities of nature and science and the two put together. After all is it not the two sides coming together in the end that makes them more powerful than the enemy and enables them to escape?

I think the only thing I have left to say is that I've ordered the next two books in the series from the library and I can't wait till they arrive. This is definitely a book I would recommend to any reader of any age. And adults, please don't dismiss a book just because its in the Young Adult section! Read everything!!

Thursday, 9 October 2014

ANIMAL FARM By George Orwell



Well, this is the second of Orwell's novels that I've read and I must say that I enjoyed it just as much, if not more so than the first one (1984). I had previously picked up a brief idea of what happened from hearing people talk about the book in my literature class, so I had a faint idea of what to expect.

Animal farm is the story of a group of farm animals who decide they no longer feel that they should live under the control of the human farmers. So what do they do? Start a revolution of course!

In the first few chapters, it felt like I was reading a children's book. It's not everyday you get talking animals and angry pigs in regular adult literature, but I guess that was what made it so easy to read and understand. Orwell, took the message he wanted to put forward and simplified it so much it became almost childlike in its presentation. It is also only 100 pages long so it really doesn't take long to read at all.

Clearly though this is not a children's book, holding a lot of strong themes and ideologies, it is definitely a book for the more mature readers/ older teens and up I thinks. It really makes you think about dreams and ideals and how well they will actually turn out and above all, are our dreams any different from our reality? Is there a difference in what we have now and what we want to have or, is it just a different mindset, allowing us to see the same situation from a different perspective.

A very deep book and personally, one that has made me think rather than talk. This is a great, simply complex book which I would definitely recommend to anyone looking for a quick but thought provoking read.





Friday, 19 September 2014

THE KNIFE OF NEVER LETTING GO By Patrick Ness


For a good couple of years now, people have been telling me that I have to read some Patrick Ness novels and everyone seemed completely put out that I hadn't come across this brilliant author sooner.

If you haven't already twigged, this is the first Patrick Ness novel I have read, recommended specifically by a colleague at work who is slightly in love with said books. I must say that reading this book certainly has been a bit of a journey, I've laughed like a hyena and cried like a baby and consequently felt everything in between. One thing did shock me though, and that was the horrific violence and graphic-ness of the book. Now don't get me wrong, it's not all blood, guts and gore to the extent of putting you off a meal and making you never want to fall asleep again, far from it. However, you just don't really expect the awful secrets that Todd finally reveals in the end. You just never imagine its going to be something that horrific. Its one of those, where if you do imagine what it might be, you pray that it wont be the case even though you know it's probably true.

My favourite character by far is Manchee the dog, I mean how can you not instantly fall in love with him? In fact, I fell in love with him so much  that I considered stopping reading the books altogether if anything should happen to him, he's just that lovable and charismatic.

Living in a world without silence isn't as unusual as you would think it is and many people do live with it everyday, myself being one of them. As a result I found this book even more interesting than normal. 

Despite this being an excellent teen AND adult book, it is still quite hard in places because of the great relationships you build up with the characters. 

I have really, really enjoyed reading this, though I'm not sure when I'll get round to reading the following books due to my ever growing reading list, but I would certainly recommend this to anyone looking for a action packed yet unusual read.

Wednesday, 13 August 2014

THE 100 By Kass Morgan


I first came across this book after watching the first few episodes of the new series on TV. While browsing in the local book shop, I noticed that the original book was on offer and decided to give it ago and I am more than pleased to say that I have not been disappointed in any way at all. In fact I've read the entire thing in less than 24 hours. I think I've only ever managed that with one other book before (The Fault In our Stars by John Green). The 100 is totally gripping and makes it impossible for the reader to put it down. The only regret I have is that the book finished. I just want to pick it up and start reading it again.

Now I don't want to make this a comparison between the TV series and the book, however if you have seen the TV version and are debating whether or not to read the book, go for it! Do it! The TV adaptation is so far different to the book. So many characters have been added and taken out to make it more appealing to a television audience. In fact the only characters which are consistent between the two are Clarke, Bellamy and his sister, and Wells and his father.

I like the book more because it gives insight into the everyday live of the people on the ship, parallel to the people who have been sent to earth. You also get to see the same event from two different perspectives, such as the passing of the comet.

This isn't the first time that I've been drawn to a book about younger people being left to fend for themselves in an effort to survive. Similar themes can be seen in The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins, and also in Gone by Michael Grant. We seem to be living in a world at the moment, where we are obsessed with the possibilities of what would happen if there were suddenly a lock of law and order, who would take charge, who would survive. It seems to be quite a grim obsession we have currently, but definitely one that seems to be selling books. (which is always a good thing)

There doesn't seem to be anything mega special that jumps out at me when I think about this book. No important message forced at me by the author, no life changing epiphany which means I'll never look at life the same again. But maybe that's what make this book so awesome. It's just a darn good book without all the paraphernalia that makes reading books nowadays such hard work. Sometimes less is more.

Read it! You know you want to.

THE HIT By Melvin Burgess


I must say, this has been a really enjoyable and interesting book to read. There are so many different themes and ideas packed into this book and yet it doesn't seem complicated or over crowded in anyway shape or form. I love it! Then again, I'm all for any book that has some sort of moral, especially one that makes you think about, and appreciate it more than you do already. There were a number of times while reading this book when I genuinely found myself thinking about what would be on my bucket list if I found myself under the influence of Death, or equally I might have found myself wondering whether or not I would have chosen to take it.

I think it was quite brave of the author to take on a topic like drugs and gang violence, because these are covered a lot in novels now-a-days and it can be difficult to write about it in a way that makes your story stand out from the others. But I'm am pleased to say that I think Burgess has done an incredible job and has definitely written a novel which tackles common but important themes while making it stand apart from everything else at the same time.

A brilliant book and one that I would definitely recommend, I'm looking forward to reading some of Burgess's other work.

Monday, 10 March 2014

NINETEEN EIGHTY-FOUR By George Orwell



Nineteen Eighty-Four has been on my 'Must Read' list ever since I started my English Literature course back in September of last year, and as much as I enjoyed the book (and I did!!!) it wasn't quite what I was expecting from the novel. If you have already read the book, then you will know that it is incredibly political and in some ways, I wish I had read the book before taking Politics As Level as this only enhanced my understandings of the events that were taking place and made them all the more frightening. 

When I first came across The Party's main three-part slogan at the start of the book, I found it difficult  to see how there could be any sense in the idea that war and peace are the same thing and that there is little and no difference between freedom and slavery. The idea that one is never truly free because real freedom means to be on your own and not having anyone to be accountable to or for, however paradoxically, being on your own does not mean being free at all because you are responsible for maintaining your freedom and therefore are a slave to yourself and your right to freedom. As the books progresses and these things are put into context, it makes you realise just how real and accurate these slogans actually are.

Although the plots and ideologies in the book are incredibly exaggerated, if you look close enough you can see elements of things in the book, reflected in our own society, - countries becoming and battling to become superstates, society coving up information that makes them look bad, not quite physically changing history, but in my mind they're not far off.

Initially I loved Winston's character, I thought he was brilliant and should be supported in his efforts to over throw the party, but I found myself definitely growing hard towards him and his attitudes as it became apparent of his 'fight-fire-with-fire' attitude. He complained and was repulsed by The Party's lack of morality and human nature, however he was willing to throw acid into a child's face, to lie and  murder just to get back at the party. Wasn't it the lies and the murdering of innocent lives that he was angry about? So why would acting the same way show that he was any better than them which is the conclusion that Winston comes to near the end of the novel. That his is better than them and more moral and more human. Personally, I think he is just as bad as the party, the only difference is that he is fighting for something different. I have to admit that in the final part, I felt little in the way of pain and pity towards Winston, and even found myself asking him to be sent to a forced labour camp.

One thing that Orwell has done very well indeed, is to help you empathise with the characters. As a reader, one of the first things I do in a book is develop my relationships with the characters, however right from the word go I was reluctant to connect with anyone and was wary of anything. I wanted to believe that I liked O'Brien's character until the end but something about the way Orwell wrote made me hold back and think 'yes but...'. I found myself detaching myself from Julia and getting as far away as I could because I didn't know if I could trust her. Even Winston who is the protagonist, the person we are supposed to love and support in any other novel, here you just want to keep an eye on him. I was very worried through most of the novel that he was going to do something that even the reader couldn't forgive him for it. 

Nineteen Eighty-Four is a brilliant book and one I am so glad to have read. I was genuinely surprised at how easy it was to read. The pages kept turning and I kept on reading. The hardest part of the book to read was the segment from THE BOOK and even then, it never became unenjoyable. The whole thing has been a fascinating and incredibly thoughtful journey. I know this was Orwell's final novel, but it has left me wanting to back-track and pickup Animal Farm as soon as I get the chance.

Thursday, 5 December 2013

THE HANDMAID'S TALE by Margaret Atwood (chapters 22 - 25)


Chapter twenty two starts off with a short paragraph, where Offred is explaining how she is feeling after the Birth, however the way she speaks, in short, breathless sentences makes it sound more like it is Offred who has given birth to the child rather than Ofwarren. As I mentioned last time, this reflects the ideology that the Handmaids are all one body, carrying out one purpose. The shortness of the paragraph also suggests that it is something important that she neither has the energy, or wants to talk about and therefore sums it up quickly.

The format of the rest of this chapter is rather clever, because it is Offred talking about another handmaid and she is retelling a story that has been passed onto her. She narrates the story in third person which makes this element stand out against the rest of the narrative because you have first and third person narrative juxtaposed together. This emphasizes the importance of this story to the readers. It is only once, Offred reveals this to the reader, this she becomes to act more bravely and starts to break the rules more frequently. This could be representing the empowerment of knowledge. By physically telling the story of Moira's defiance, she has come to believe it more definitely, to the point that she feels that she can do it also, that she also has the ability and the power to do such things. This also shows us clearly the reason that the handmaids conversations with each other are so restricted; because of the powerful effect that this information can have.

The other thing that really stands out to me in this chapter; short though it is, is the way that Moira swaps her clothes with the aunt, this is not what surprised me though, what surprised me is the reaction that everybody has. No one begs to differ that Moira is an Aunt merely because she is wearing the Aunts uniform. Here we see all to clearly that in Gilead, what you wear defines who you are. You are judged by the colour of you're dress. This is something that we as a reader can relate to because we live in a world where, although we are encouraged not to judge people by what brands and labels they wear, we still subconsciously do it. We make assumptions based on what we see people wearing, just as the Guardian assumed that Moira was an Aunt based on the dress she was wearing.

"This is a reconstruction" is the opening statement of chapter twenty three. I find this most fascinating because although Offred is talking about her story; and this suggests that she is writing this after Gilead and she is no longer a handmaid, I believe that is is also Atwood referring to the entire world this the story is set in. Gilead is a reconstruction of society, constructing it how they believe it should be run. Also they have reconstructed many religious values, which also have been rebuilt to suit the needs of Gilead and the people that are in charge. So I feel quite unnerved at the thought that somebody has taken a strong, thriving society (as we know it) and they have rebuilt/reconstructed it to fit with their ideas and their regime.

I love chapter twenty three, I really do love it. I think it is brilliant how Atwood creates this terrible suspense as Offred is summoned to the commanders office for reasons we know not. I know personally, I began to feel scared for Offred because I thought his intentions were to rape her or force her to carry out some equally degrading activity. I felt that the poor girl had been through enough and I really felt like she didn't need this, however when she enters his office and asks her to play SCRABBLE! I physically started laughing out loud because it just didn't seem real at the time; that the commander should summon his Handmaid in the cover of night to attend to him in his office... to play scrabble of all things. It almost adds an element of comic relief to the story. It seems so trivial to us, scrabble isn't something that we would normally get excited over, but for Offred it is sweet,sweet honey, after all words and literature are forbidden to her, so this opportunity to play word games is absolutely unbelievable. It has added something to her life now that she can actually look forward to however it also raises the question: Is this to good to be true?

The whole scenario in the commanders office is very much separated from the rest of Gileadean life. Even the Commander himself is completely different once he is in this room with Offred, even the way that he speaks to her. I found myself quite taken aback when he said hello to her because this is not to required greeting, it is something of the time before. However Offred explains to the reader that she had difficulty remembering the correct response to Hello. This shows us that despite her defiance, the ways of Gilead have finally managed to make some impression on her, pushing out old memories that used to seem so trivial and causing her to automatically think that there is a correct response to everything. As well as breaking the laws of reading and literature, I also believe that the Commander is breaking the laws of education in Gilead, re-tutoring her in the ways of the time before Gilead; almost as if he feels sorry for her and he is trying to help her hold onto herself in this society so set on separating itself from the rest of the world.

I think the words that Atwood has chosen for the Commander and Offred to play during the game are very clever and if you look closely at them, you can see the hidden meaning:

Larynx: The part of the throat that causes you to create voice, Offred's voice is silenced in Gilead

Valance: A piece of material draped over another, could in this instance the dress that Offred is forced to wear.

Quince: A fruit - Fruit of the womb, children, fertility

Zygote: The beginning stages of an embryo, Offred has still yet to concieve

Limp: Could be a pun aimed at the commander and his manhood, considering he has still to get her pregnant

Gorge: Offred is gorging on words which she wouldn't normally have access to while she has the opportunity too. Gorge is also a chasm which could represent the distance between her and the commander and/or how Gilead has left Offred feeling inside.

Finally for this chapter, in his office the Commander even has the audacity and the self felt empowerment to ask Offred to kiss him, which she has already explain in chapter sixteen: "Kissing is forbidden between us".
It shows us a little bit about who the commander thinks he is, Untouchable and that he cannot be punished because his is too high up in the chain of command. However, even though he feels like this, he doesn't flaunt it, he keeps it to himself and pleasures himself with his own illegal secret.

Chapter twenty four is such a contrast to the previous chapter, she has just had one of the best nights of her new life and yet, the night time section; chapter fourteen, is so feminist centralized. we hear her recalling things that Aunt Lydia said about 'Men are sex machines' and she also thinks of her mother who, by know, we know always was an active feminist. Almost as if now she is trying to convince herself that it is too good to be true and that she shouldn't get too comfortable with him.

But something has change, now, tonight. Circumstances have changed.

I really like how Atwood has used this sentence, because it marks turning point in the entire book, which Offred does not yet know about. This works well because we know that there are somethings which she isn't telling us, either because she doesn't know or doesn't want to experience that pain anymore than she has to, and now it is almost the opposite, she is revealing something that she doesn't know she knows yet.

Atwood has juxtaposed different emotions and atmospheres really well, after you hear Offred contemplating humanity and how easy it is to reinvent it, thinking about makeup and clothing and the apparently dire effects it had, and then all of a sudden, it switched into this crazed hysteria, that is so great it causes Offred to collapse. I think this direct juxtaposition works incredibly well to express the certain effects of just how drastic hysteria can really be. I also think that Atwood's choice of the word Hysteria is really interesting, coming from the same origins as the word Hysterectomy which applies only to women and the removal of the uterus and the womb, which of course, Offred would be useless without, so this word could represent that some important part of her has been taken from her; personality, name etc...

'Red all over the cupboard' is a sentence in this chapter which has really grabbed my attention and really made me think. This could literally mean the red of her dress but then it also makes you wonder if she is bleeding in someway, a sign that maybe she has failed to get pregnant again. But also I feel that maybe Atwood has used it as a metaphor, linking it to the phrase 'seeing red' which means that someone is really angry, furious even. The idea that you are so angry that you begin to see everything in a red tint, because of the hate and the frustration and the anger that you are feeling. I feel that this is a metaphor for how Offred is feeling at this point, that the whole event with the Commander has gone beyond puzzling her and has actually made her feel angry about it.

Chapter twenty five has a great mix of different themes and thoughts and snippets of memories, as if Offred is struggling to focus on one particular thing for too long with out being distracted or forcing herself to think about something less painful. Initially she talks about when Cora discovered her in the cupboard, however after only a couple of pages, she skips ahead missing out entire months which we hear nothing about. This backs up the idea of the unreliable narrator; the idea that Offred is hiding things from the reader, whether it is because she wishes not to share or because she is unable to share for fear of punishment  we do not know, however it does make us wonder about whether we are hearing the whole truth. Also during the section that Offred skips ahead to, she describes how out of everything that Serena Joy has, the only things that she really genuinely coverts is the shears that she uses in the garden, this links back to previously in the novel when Offred expresses an interest in stealing something from the house but it also suggests that maybe she is beginning to think about ending her own life; equally it could be that she just wants ownership of something that would give her power. It reminds me of a part in The Fault In Our Stars by John Green, where Gus always holds a cigarette between his teeth yet never lighting it, the idea being that you have control over the killing thing and whether or not it has the power to kill you. If you don't light the cigarette, it can't cause lung cancer. It could be a similar situation, Offred wants the shears not to end her own life with them but just to know that she has the power to do that if the need ever arose or she ever wished to do so.

Chapter twenty five also plays host to the third meeting of Offred and the commander. All in all, these meeting with the commander, reveal to us the journey that Offred is going on and how she is becoming more and more adventurous and brave. On this third meeting she asks the Commander for some hand cream (a forbidden substance). I suppose to us it would be like asking you're legal guardian or boss for drugs or something equally and illegal.

She also takes the step as to explain to the reader, the arrangement that she has with the Commander. This suggests that she is beginning to trust the reader and to feel more comfortable with the people she is speaking to. This backs up the idea addressed in earlier posts, that Offred is an unreliable narrator. It confirms that she has been hiding parts of the truth from us as she is only now beginning to reveal these to us.
'The Commander and I have and arrangement. Its not the first such arrangement in history, though the shape it's taken is not the usual one." I find this quote fascinating as it hints to the realization that Offred comes to at the end of the chapter. It is as if she is looking back in hindsight at what happened and is trying to warn her previous self that she is growing too comfortable with the commander and that "for him, I must remember, that I am only a whim". I feel that the first quote leads up nicely to this latter one, letting the reader see something that our narrator didn't see themselves at the time. "It's not the first such arrangement in history".

Finally, the way Atwood repeats the use of listing devices when describing the scrabble game helps to emphisise how the ritualistic and orderly way in which these meetings flow. Everyone appears to be the same however the difference in the way that Offred describes them changes, showing us that her attitudes towards the Commander and his arrangement have changed and are changing.


Tuesday, 8 October 2013

Response to JEZEBEL'S in THE HANDMAID'S TALE by Margaret Atwood

If there are any good sides to being stuck at home ill, then it has to be that it gives you plenty of quite time to read a book without the distractions of work or college etc... While reading The Handmaid's Tale, tucked up in bed, I was able to think about some of the more shocking things that I came across in the book.

Please note that this post is not connected to the series I am writing which works through this book in depth and detail. This is a one off post expressing my reaction to part of the book we were assigned to look at at home.

If you just merely read a synopsis of the book or a brief overview , then it would be very easy to say 'oh well, nothing is ever as pristine and perfect as it seems, there's obviously going to be something going on behind the scenes, however I found that while reading the book, I was caught into thinking in the way of Gilead, encouraging Offred not to do things for fear of punishment, and although the black market trade was of little surprise to me, the idea that somewhere like Jezebel's even existed was totally out of the question. I think Atwood has been very clever in making sure that the book isn't as predictable as it could well have been..

The first thing that surprised me about this section of the book, was the Commander's very sudden change of attitude. For night's on end Offred has been summoned to play scrabble and read books, and then all of a sudden, he requests that she should wear a feathery, sparkly, sequinned leotard and make up. My initial thoughts were just that the Commander had finally gotten bored of playing word games and enticing Offred with things she couldn't otherwise have, and he had finally decided to use her for what everyone initially thought: sex.

I can understand the existence of the Black market for alcohol and cigarettes, however Jezebel's; which in essence is a brothel, is everything that Gilead has ever fought against. It is in the same league as porn and strip clubs, ultimately men objectifying women. This is also the thing that shocks me the most about Moira being there. As a feminist, standing for women's rights, Jezebel's is the last place I would have expected to see her.

The final thing that took me by surprise was the presence of the Aunts. I first thought that may be it was just an enterprise run by a couple of rebellious commanders and guardians, however seeing the Aunts suggests that the women who end up here, are groomed for this just as much as the Handmaids are groomed for their job. An illegal part of society that people don't just ignore, but they encourage and support.

The whole thing shocked me, this supposedly pure and pristine society, seems to have some very dark stains indeed.


Friday, 4 October 2013

THE HANDMAID'S TALE by Margaret Atwood (chapters 17 - 21)


Chapter seventeen is so different to chapter sixteen, that it almost takes you aback when Offred returns to her room as if nothing has happened.

The way that Offred uses the butter is yet again something that is completely alien to us; something else that was once strange, but has now become the norm for our narrator, however even though it is completely alien to us, it still shows us how Offred and the other Handmaids are still, to some extent able to think for themselves. They use butter as a substitute moisturiser; 'A trick I learned at the Rachel and Leah school'. Rachel and Leah being the two women from the Bible who have supposedly inspired this society of surrogacy. This clearly displays the fact that Offred isn't the only one who is doing things that she shouldn't be doing.

At the top of page one hundred and eight, she mentions that she's alone in her single bed. This isn't the first time that she has nodded to the fact that she has a single bed, she does this also at the start of chapter twenty three. This could be Offred revealing to us one of the things that she is struggling most to adjust to. If for years she has been sharing a double bed with Luke as we are lead to believe, then it would be very difficult to get used to sleeping alone in a single bed. This could reflect the loneliness that Offred feels, and it also alludes to the notion that romance is never an option in Gilead.

'The moon on the breast of the new fallen snow' is a line from The Night Before Christmas, which is a happy poem about Christmas and the excitement that it is to bring, not only does this contradict the atmosphere of Offred's entire life, but it could also act as a metaphor for what is to come, when she is summoned to meet the commander and it seems as if all her Christmases have come at once; reading, books, magazines, unrestricted speech...

I find it quite strange that all of a sudden, Offred declares her undying craving to steal something, which catches you off guard a little bit. It seems like a bit of an anachronism, you get this long heart felt cry about how she longs to have Luke and to be held and feel something other than oppression, then all of a sudden 'I want to steal something'

However this impulse that she gets unknowingly leads her to Nick who allows her to feel for a short moment how she longed to feel with Luke. It allows us to see that Offred still does have the ability to feel what she thought she had lost forever. Romance is never an option in Gilead however in that slight moment, it appears that although it may not be an option, it does still exist. This is also backed up on page one hundred and twenty three, (chapter nineteen) when she tells us about the initials and dates carved into the desk, in an attempt to create something permanent to show that those concerned would be in love forever. However there were none of these from after nineteen eighty, which gives an indication as to when Gilead first came to be about.

I think the simile of the crystal glass sound that Offred uses to describe herself is really effective, because it allows her to show just for delicate and fragile she is feeling. Something beautiful, yet fragile.

The rest of this chapter; I think, is really interesting because, Offred talks about what she believes about what happen to her beloved Luke after they were separated. This in itself is not unusually, people often talk through what they believe as if they are trying to reinforce it in their own minds, to help the to believe it more, however what IS unusual about this is that Offred talks through three or four different possibilities as to what has happen to Luke and each one is very different to the one before. I find it interesting how she tries to tell us that she believes all three of these. You can believe someone is dead, a prisoner and free all at the same time. It just isn't possible for someone to be all of these things at once.

Towards the end of chapter eighteen, we also start to see something else rather interesting begin to happen. 'In Hope. why did they put that above a dead person? Was it the corpse hoping, or someone still alive? Does Luke hope?'
Firstly, this quote tells us that out of the three possibilities she talked us through in the chapter, the one where Luke is dead is the one she believes the least because she can still talk about Luke as if he is still alive and they are just separated.
Secondly, the reasons that In Hope is put across gravestones is because the people who buried them are hoping that they will go to heaven. So the fact that Offred is wondering what there is to hope about suggests that she has lost any faith that she had before Gilead. The one thing that is supposed to be built around religion is the very thing that has caused her lose her religion.

Atwood has named part eight Birth Day as apposed to Birthday. This is an effective play on words. In Gilead, a birth day is not a celebration of someones birthday but the day that a child is born, and all the handmaids gather to share in the birth and the Commanders wives gather together to celebrate the birth of the commanders wife's child.

I really like the metaphor that Atwood has used for describing Gilead. The cushion that used to be part of a set of three FAITH, HOPE and CHARITY. 'HOPE and CHARITY, where have they been stowed?' out of these three hope and charity have been taken away. Just as there is no hope in Gilead and certainly no charity. This leaves only faith. After all Gilead is built on faith and religion, so if you choose not to accept faith, what else is there left?

The scene with Offred thinking about the chair is also very effective because it raises so many things that have a relevance to Gilead and/or Offred:


  • leader of a meeting - chairman - COMMANDER
  • mode of execution - electric chair - PEOPLE HAVE BEEN EXECUTED IN GILEAD
  • first syllable in charity - ONE THING MISSING FROM GILEAD
  • french word for flesh - HANDMAIDS ARE NEED FOR THEIR BODIES - THEIR FLESH
To Offred they are unconnected but to us the reader they are most definitely connected. It also indicates that Offred could well have once been a fairly well educated woman before she became and handmaid.

 While Offred is in the Birthmobile, she tells us a small amount about what the inside looks like, however I get the impression; from the benches and the fact she has to get in the back door, that the Birthmobile is nothing more than a pimped up prison van, used to transport the Handmaids in large numbers. this reflects the idea that Offred is a prisoner in this society and this world.

Chapter twenty is interesting as it really does lay out in front of you, the views of this new world. I think of all the neologisms that Atwood has used throughout the novel so far, the term Unwoman, that we find here is by far the most interesting. Initially I thought it just meant women who were infertile and unable to carry out their purpose in life, however as Aunt Lydia continues on, it becomes clear that it actually encompasses all women who are 'wasting their time'. This points most directly women who have sex with other women, i.e lesbians.

However Aunt Lydia says 'We would have to condone some of their ideas, even today. Only some, mind you'. This shows us that this community of Gilead would agree with some of the things the Unwomen fought for and said, which tells us that these were Lesbian Feminists.

I'm going to move onto chapter twenty one fairly swiftly because I feel that this is a very important chapter in this section of the book.

The colour symbolism in this chapter is really incredible, for the first time we see a handmaid not dressed in red, Janine/Ofwarren who has gone into labour, has been permitted to give birth wearing white. This could symbolize that she is no longer just a handmaid, but she has completed that task that has been set, she has not only gotten pregnant, but she has carried it to full term and is giving birth to it. She has completed her purpose.

The fact that all the handmaids are there and also all the commanders' wives are there, works well to symbolize the idea that they are all one body; one flesh. This is further backed up when Offred describes the labour pains that she and the other Handmaids begin to feel in sympathy with Janine.

I have really enjoyed reading this section of the book and I do believe that the book continues to get better.

Monday, 30 September 2013

THE HANDMAID'S TALE by Margaret Atwood (chapters 11 - 16)


I think that chapter eleven is a really interesting chapter in the book, because it really opens up a whole new side to Gilead that the reader hasn't yet been able to see, because of Offred's restricted view of the world. Looking back in previous chapters, we have seen that there have been rebels who have been executed for going against the system, and naturally you would think that this would deter people from committing these 'crimes' however in chapter eleven, it is more than apparent that this is not the case. There are definitely those who still attempt to rebel against Them and their new society.

Even the medical professionals who are responsible for making sure the handmaids are in full health as to be able to carry out their job; are not allowed to look at the handmaid's faces. This goes to show the restricted nature of Gilead; many medical professionals from our own time have admitted that they can only present a very restricted medical diagnosis is they cannot see the face of the patient. However, we later learn that for anything more than a sexual health check-up, the Handmaids are taken to a hospital which we hear incredibly little about. We are told nothing about what goes on in the hospitals, this is because Offred has so far never been to one of these hospitals and has possibly never been in contact with anyone who has and/or wishes to share their experience.

It is also in chapter eleven when Atwood really hammers it home how important getting pregnant to these women is. Offred genuinely considers accepting the help of this doctor, who is offering himself and his services to her so that she might conceive and not receive the fate of an Unwoman. Despite it being illegal and extremely dangerous, she still considers risking it to make sure that she fulfills her duty as a handmaid.
However, Atwood lures you into thinking that Offred is going to accept so when she turns his offer down, it comes as a slight surprise, not enough to throw you but just enough to make to have to step back and review the situation. This shows us that Offred is afraid that by accepting the doctors offer she will be giving in to the new world she is being forced to live in, doing anything to please her commander and fulfill her job; but by rejecting it, she is holding onto the little bit of her self control and herself. For Offred it can't all be about getting pregnant in anyway possible because then she does what she has tried not to do for so long; give in.

I think it is really effective that chapter twelve starts in the bathroom, as if the events at the doctors have left her feeling dirty and unclean. That she has had a bath immediately afterwards to wash away the unclean and illegal actions of the doctor. To remove every last speck of their conversation from her conscious.

The way she describes 'my nakedness is strange to me already' allows the reader to understand that not only has Gilead managed to alter society's view of women, but it has managed to to change women's view of themselves. In what appears to be a fairly short period of time; one, maybe two generations, women have stopped being comfortable in revealing clothing and makeup and now they are uncomfortable even in the bath with only themselves there. This is a really good example of what Aunt Lydia meant when she said 'This may not seem ordinary to you know, but after a time it will. it will become ordinary'. For so long, all the women have been forced to cover themselves from head to foot that now they cannot stand to be uncovered, even in front of themselves.

This bath time event acts as a trigger for Offred, causing her to think about her own daughter from the time before. However these are not happy memories. Initially she remembers her daughter being stolen from her in a supermarket, which allows us to sympathize with Offred because we know that her daughter has not been the only thing that was taken from her, but also her freedom and the rest of her family. She recalls thinking at the time that it was an 'isolated incident' which we know wasn't the case. This backs up the idea of the unreliable narrator, admitting that she got it wrong, so how do we know now, that elements of her life now are not being recalled incorrectly or that she wrongly informing us of things that are happening.

About half way through this interesting chapter, we learn that Offred has a small tattoo branding her with her new life and role, at the time when I read this I thought little of it, however in chapter twenty-four, Offred talks about the Nazi concentration camps and this allowed me to make the link. Prisoners in the concentration camps were branded with a tattoo of a number just as Offred has been in her world, signifying that Offred is in fact a prisoner, with orders to carry out and strict rules to stick to, or suffer the consequences.

Chapter thirteen is a nap section, which I believe in itself is unusual, throughout the rest of the book, it has always been Night sections that have been slotted in between the rest of the story, allowing us to alternate between the two, however this time rather than night, it is a nap which we are welcomed into by our narrator. Letting us see that they have some 'freedom' during the day. The same sort of freedom that Offred always seems to take full advantage from and her we are informed about the arrival of Moira; and the arrival of Moira also reveals even more information to us about the strict culture that has been forced upon them. She talks about how friendship are frowned upon and suspicious and her secret meeting with Moira reveal how strict the Aunts are even about small things like going to the toilet.

I find it interesting how, during her nap time, Offred is thinking about a nap time along time ago from when she initially started as a handmaid. Through out the rest of this Nap, Offred recalls (or dreams) about a number of different memories, she remembers being in her old apartment with everything packed into boxes apart from her clothes which are hung up in her wardrobe. I feel this is a really important part in showing Offred's current emotional and mental positioning. The fact that she doesn't recognize her own clothes in the wardrobe, isn't because she couldn't recognize them at the time, but because now, in Gilead, Offred has been conditioned to the ways of the world to such an extent that she can no longer remember or imagine herself wearing such clothing. Also the way she calls out to Luke and then as a side, say that it 'Occurs to me that he may not even be alive.' You would only think something like that looking back on it, not at the time the memory took place.
This in turn, triggers another memory, of her running through a forest with her daughter trying to escape, however she had drugged her daughter to keep her quiet, but that made it difficult to travel with her, it showed her that doing WHATEVER it takes doesn't always payoff, this could have been one of the reasons that she turned down the doctor on his offer, but this isn't the only time she admits to drugging her daughter as we see later on in the book.

Offred also reveals; whether on purpose or not, that she has been having the same dreams over and over again: Of all the dream, this is the worst.

Now then, I feel that chapter fourteen, fifteen and sixteen should be tackled as one element,especially as it is all part of the same Ceremony.

Before the Commander arrives, we see for the first time the smallest glimmer of compassion from the Commander's Wife; Serena Joy. Despite the fact that they are not aloud to read or watch any form of television, Serena Joy allows them to watch the news before the ceremony begins properly, however the way that she switches it off before the Commander arrives suggest that he himself is unaware of this that his wife is doing causes us to think that maybe, he also is hiding things from his wife, however at this point it is just an assumption. While all this is happening, the seemingly unimportant Nick (the car man) suddenly makes a move on Offred, Touching his toes to her and stirring a reaction in her which takes her by surprise, not only because what he is doing is forbidden, but also because she didn't realize that she could still respond to men in this way.

After the commander enters, the atmosphere seems to change quite dramatically, it goes from silent excitement and gratefulness to being extremely formal and serious. The commander has arrived and therefore, the proceedings can begin.

I'll admit that I'm struggling as with what to write in terms of chapters fourteen and fifteen, a lot of it is just seems to be Offred trying to postpone telling us about what happens in chapter sixteen. Its almost as if Offred is trying to get out of telling us what she has to go through by explaining the first part of the ceremony in such detail that it takes up two chapters.

I think this is very clever of Atwood because she has drawn out the wait for this moment for so long that when we do finally find out what Offred's purpose in this life is for, it hits us like a bomb shell.

When I initially read chapter sixteen it made me feel incredibly awkward and almost embarrassed at what I was reading. Sex is something that traditionally is kept between the two people involved, so the fact that three people are there is uncomfortable in itself, but as a reader I felt like I had walked in on something that I shouldn't have done. I think we can all agree that in this case, Atwood has definitely succeeded in creating some rather Avant Garde emotions in her reader.

The thing that made this the most uncomfortable for me was Atwood use of the word f**k. However, even though it is a word that I myself am uncomfortable with, I believe that it was the right word for Atwood to use and she explains it beautifully in the chapter itself.

I do not say making love, because this is not what he's doing. Copulating would also be inaccurate, because it would imply two people and only one is involved. Nor does rape cover it: nothing is going on here that I haven't signed up for.

I think that sums this point up to be honest with you.

Another point of interest for me was when Offred talks about the Commander not being as bad as the last one, which suggests that there is more than one man that she has been made to have sex with, which seems to contradict the so called christian nature of this society. So if this society is so religious, how can they permit it that woman can be forced to have sex with multiple men whoever they are assigned to? But then she talks about how this is the life she chose, it's almost like she's hedging it a bit, because in fact, it was either this life, of being sent to the colonies which was almost certainly resulting in a slow and painful death from radiation poisoning.

I think I will be glad to move away from this section of the book and move on, in a hope that something more positive is to come for Offred.... one can always hope.

Monday, 23 September 2013

THE HANDMAID'S TALE by Margaret Atwood (chapters 7 - 10)



So at the end of chapter six we left Offred and Ofglen looking at the hanged men on the city wall on their way back to the houses they have been assigned to live in, and our Handmaid narrator recalls something that Aunt Lydia said, which proves to be rather unnerving.

"Ordinary, said Aunt Lydia, is what we are used to. This may not seem ordinary to you now, but after a time it will. It will become ordinary".

Personally, I find this thought quite scary, the idea that everything that I once knew and did as part of my daily life, would soon become so far separated from who I am that it would no longer seem ordinary. By using this quote, Atwood had gotten deep inside the head of her reader, making them feel like the narrator, helping us deepen our connections with Offred.

However throughout the story, Atwood uses fragmented narrative. All the chapters are broken up with flashbacks, varying in the time of the memory, sometimes they are memories merely months old; recalling when she first started her new life as a Handmaid as we see on page 23, and some times they are much older, going back many years before the 'war'; such as when she remembers holding her daughter on page 73 later on in chapter twelve. Another way that Atwood achieves this fragmented narrative is to add chapters to the book when Offred isn't restricted to the ways of Gilead.

This is what we have in chapter seven. 'The night is mine, my own time, to do with as I will'.
Initially, as the reader I felt a sigh of relief when I read this first sentence because from the beginning I have wanted her to be able to have even a small time to herself, but that relief I felt for her was short lived as she goes on to explain that 'as long as I am quiet. As long as I don't move. As long as I lie still'. Even the time she is given to herself is controlled by the people who own her. But I feel that this is where Atwood most reveals the resolve of the Narrator; Offred. She uses this time to do what she is advised not to; she uses it to think, to dream, to be her own soul. This is also when we first meet Moira.

She also refers a lot to the reader in chapter seven more so than in the rest of the book, explaining the versatility of the word 'you' and how it can mean a number of different things, almost as if she is trying to catch the readers attention, like a plea for help, we are outside this society and therefore the only ones who can help her.

Chapter eight returns back to the main story-line where chapter six left off, looking at the bodies on the city wall (which have now been changed which indicates they have been waiting and watching a while).

When Offglen says to Offred 'it's a beautiful Mayday' it triggers another flash back to one of her discussions with Luke (her husband before Gilead) to the origins of the distress call 'mayday', this is just another example of Offred trying to retain her sanity in the midst of a culture where she cannot, think for herself or read or do anything remotely similar to her old life. She is clinging on to what is left of her old life and refusing to let go.This mention of 'mayday' and also 'SOS' could also once again be Offred's subtle attempting at calling out to the reader for help and salvation. However on page 59 when she sees the Commander out side her room, she actually refers to it as her room; her personal room, and she acknowledges that she calls it her room, which shows although she could be slipping into believing that this is a normal life, she still has the opportunity to stop herself from falling out of reality.

Chapter eight is quite long and covers a number of different settings, including the town, the kitchen with the Marthas and the hall outside of the room Offred has been assigned. We spend every little time in the town and the return journey to the house is very short and to the point, almost rushed which could reflect how They feel about the Handmaids being in the town with other people. Earlier we learn that the university has been shut down; this can implore the idea that 'knowledge is power' and university is a source of knowledge. This shows us that They don't want anyone to pose as a threat to their position of power. However people can also gain knowledge by talking to other people, so by controlling the language used and the topics of conversation which are acceptable between Handmaids, keeps the passing of information to a minimum. The short amount to time spent talking about the time spent in town and the journey home, also suggests that the people in charge, don't like the Handmaids to be away from their houses for too long.

This though is continued on into chapter nine, when Offred finally gives into the idea that it is her room and that if she is to keep hold of her sanity, she really must have somewhere to call her own, something more than just a hotel room, as she refers to it when she recalls exploring the room for the first time.  The fact that initially thought of it as a hotel room, showed that Offred had a glimmer of hope when she had first entered her current situation however the way that Atwood has juxtaposed the past and present, it is really clear that by accepting this 'hotel room' she has accepted that this new world is not a temporary measure and it is more than likely that she may never see the end of it.

Throughout the rest of the chapter, Offred talks us through the search of her room that she did, which I think is a very personal thing to do. This is the only place that she has to herself and she chooses to share that with us. Even down to the one thing that she is strictly forbidden to do; reading, when she finds those few words (Nolite te bastardes carborundorum), Even though Offred doesn't know what they mean, she still holds them very close to her, something that no one else knows about and that she can keep to herself, but even these she chooses to share with us.

Atwood uses another religious reference when she says, 'I saved the cupboard until the third day'. In the Christian belief Jesus rose again from the death on the third day after his crucifixion to bring salvation to man kind, I think this could be a metaphor that whatever Offred found in that cupboard and what ever those words mean, could be the key to her salvation from Gilead.

About half of chapter ten is about Offred remembering memories of her songs she used to sing with her other and also memories of chatting with Moira. Flitting between the two - past and present - ever couple of paragraphs. These past parts of the chapter are very familiar to us, not only because Atwood has written one similar to it earlier in the novel but also because it include things that we ourselves can relate to.

The other half of this chapter is Offred narrating her current situation. The way that Atwood describes and writes about the new summer dresses make them sound almost pleasant, and less like the habits that they are forced to wear as their uniform. Atwood's use of the word Things makes it very clear about how sexual behavior and harassment is felt about in Gilead. 'Such things do not happen to nice women', Linking this back to the comment that Aunt Lydia made about 'Freedom to and freedom from', we can see that this society is trying to convince Offred and the other Handmaids that they're much better off where they are now, than where they were before. They are selling Gilead to the women as a place where they are free from the harassment from men and they no longer have to be embarrassed by showing to much skin or being groped by old men because non of that will happen to them in Gilead.

I feel much happier now that I have a name for the Handmaid, although we will never find out what her real name is, I still this it is important that we can refer to her with a name, to treat her with the humanity that no one else does, however this just goes to show that to Them, she is nothing but an instrument in their wider plan.

Finally, in chapter ten, we really hear Offred's thoughts about the commander clearly for the first time. we get a description of his grey hair, 'silver you might call it if you were being kind'.  And the Handmaid also tells us about how she feels about him; where as you would expect her to feel anger, hatred and respect for this man she explains how she has a feeling for him she doesn't know how to describe, however makes a point of telling us that 'I don't know what to call it, It isn't love'.  this could be an indication that the narrator is hiding things from her audience and that she may possibly be unreliable.


Wednesday, 18 September 2013

THE HANDMAID'S TALE by Margaret Atwood (chapters 1 - 6)





Initial thoughts:

Even before I had been given a copy of the book, I had begun to form some initial thoughts and feelings about the book. Just on hearing the title of the book, my first reaction was to think I would be reading a period novel set in a medieval time period. I assumed it would be told from the point of view of a servant girl/maid who served the Queen/Duchess etc.... and we would be following the story of her life in the palace and we would endure her hardships together. However this could not have been further from the truth. Initially it stood out to me as a book that I would not normally pick up although I was not reluctant to read it and up to now I have been pleasantly surprised.

The book:

I have found the first chapters of the book rather overwhelming but equally I have found them incredibly interesting and intriguing. I feel that Atwood has been very clever in the way she has started this book. She provokes so many questions in the reader's mind that it leaves them no option but to carry on reading in order to discover the answers.

In my opinion, The Handmaids tale strikes me as a novel set in the future (although, there is no mention of a time period so far), and something has happened to society, causing it to take a step back in order for it to be able to move forwards.

In chapters two through six, we learn a lot about the environment and it seems that Atwood is gradually introducing us to this strange, new, dystopian world. In chapter two, the reader is still fairly familiar with the surrounding environment. 'A chair, a table, a lamp' are all things that we are familiar with and use in everyday life. However the fact that everything in the room has been modified to make it suicide proof is the first real clue that we get into the attitudes of the society that our main character is dwelling in. It suggests that the main character (who is still unnamed at this point), is living in a world where her own actions are being controlled by other people, it also point to the suggestion that these people don't trust her and that she is not here because she wants to be.

When 'The bell that measure time is ringing' and the Handmaid ventures out of her room in chapter two, Atwood begins to reveal the hierarchy of the society that the story is set in. When we first meet the Martha, it is immediately clear to us that she is of lower status than the handmaid however it is not immediately obvious why. It is only when the handmaid recalls the Martha Cora recall the fact that it could have been her if she hadn't had her 'tubes tied' we get the first inkling into why the handmaid might be here even if it is not to clear, this is supported later in the book when her and Ofglen are sent into town and they see the men in white coats still hanging from their nooses and they describe 'the placard hung around his neck to show why he had been executed: a drawing of a human foetus'. This indicates to the reader that these men were executed for carrying out abortions for women. This suggests that abortion is forbidden in this society and leads us to believe that this has something to do with the purpose of the handmaids. I say purpose because as the name of her partner suggests (Ofglen = Of Glen. Ofwayne and Ofwarren are other examples) these women no longer have a life of their own but they are owned by their commanders and are treated as so. Therefore, it can be concluded that the handmaid narrating the story will have a similar name to that of her partner.

The colours of each woman's dress also tells us a lot about who they are, what their job is and their position in in the sociological hierarchy.

The red dresses that the Handmaids are made to wear could represent women in scarlet, and seduction which inferences towards the job she has been given, yet not revealed to the reader. The red could also signify the fact that she is a possession of the Commander, she has a contract with him that cannot be broken; almost like a blood contract (blood red). Also this can be liked to page 18 when Atwood uses the phrase "Sister's dipped in blood". Nun's have an agreement with God to serve him, so likening the handmaids to Nuns, not only reflects the religious nature of the society, but it also suggests that they have a contract or an agreement with someone, to serve in some way.

The blue dresses that the Commander's Wives wear, represent their purity and the respect they expect to receive from the handmaids and the marthas. These blue dresses can be likened to the blue dress that the Virgin Mary is often depicted wearing.

Catholic and High church views are a recurring theme throughout the story so far and I believe that this will be no different as the story continues. Not only in the dress that the women are forced to wear, but also in the way that they are made to speak. 'Blessed be the fruit' is the preferred greeting between the handmaids and 'may the Lord open' is the preferred response, however other phrases such as 'praise be' are commonly used in conversation when such conversation is permitted to take place. The term 'blessed be the fruit' could be another nod towards the handmaids purpose and place in this society, Which I think we can now conclude has much to do with bearing children and children are often referred to as the 'fruit of the womb' in religious circles.

The thing I have noticed the most about these first chapters of the book, is that Atwood has used an incredible amount of inference to point towards major points in the book without actually giving to much away too early in the book.





Monday, 16 September 2013

The 'GONE' series by Michael Grant


Despite it being a series of six books, there is no way I could ever review them as individual books; it would be like trying to write a book review for on a chapter of Harry Potter or the first half of the Hobbit. The GONE series is less like a collection of book that follow on from each other, and more like one single story that is just too voluminous to be pack into a single book.

Initially I was reluctant to pick up the first book as I thought it was going to be below my usual reading level and I didn't want to think of myself as reading a book that was aimed and written for much younger people than myself. I now see what a terrible attitude this was to have. However, in the end it was the brightly coloured pages and the contrast between black and neon that drew me to the book and force fingers to turn the first page, and I must say that after the first page was turned, there was no stopping them.

When a melt down happens at the nuclear powerplant, Little Pete Ellison uses his unknown power to create the FAYZ, a 'protective' barrier around Perdido Beach and all of its residents. However in his ignorance, Little Pete teleports everyone aged fifteen and over outside the dome, leaving hundereds of children to fend for themselves in a world riddled with mutant creatures. Fortunately, Sam Temple steps up to the plate and takes the role of mayor in this very different town. Through out the story, you will follow these children as they prematurely become young adults, as they fight to survive the FAYZ.

The thing that shocked me the most about these incredible books if the connections that you create with the characters and the way these feelings change so dramatically. The best example of this would be the connections I made with the character 'Diana Ladris'. Diana is the girlfriend and companion of the sociopath Caine. At the start of this journey I hated Diana with everything I could muster within me. I thought she was an evil witch who would do anything to get her own way or allow Caine to get his. This is very much how she was for the first three to four books in the series. I despised her character and genuinely wished ill of her if there was ever a battle or an argument between her and Caine. I wished for Caine to use his mutant telekinetic powers to destroy her in some brutally horrific way that would cause her to suffer as much as the people she herself had damaged. However when she becomes pregnant and leaves Caine to live with Sam (the other main character (the good one)), I began to truly believe that maybe she had a good seed in her heart that just needed nurturing in order to flourish. It was then I began to feel bad at myself for being so hostile towards Diana and not giving her a chance to show herself for who she really was when she didn't have Caine to perform for twenty four hours a day. I thought the way the Grant lures you into thinking to that you can trust her and that she is a changed woman, is very clever. He appeals to the human nature of his readers. It doesn't matter that you hated her before and that you wanted her dead, now she is pregnant and our own human instinct is to look after and care for this person so that they don't die and the don't get hurt; just by changing one element of Diana's situation, Grant has cleverly turned our opinion of her on it's head.

Later on in the story though, when Diana gives birth to her child, the baby is taken over by the Gaiaphage which takes the baby to use as its own body. Understandably Diana follows that dark and evil creature, following her newly found mothering instincts to look after what she believes is still her baby girl. Even though as a reader I understood that Diana couldn't possibly tear herself away from her child, I still felt deeply hurt and disappointed in Diana  that she had turned and followed the Evil one. I really felt like I'd been let down, as if I'd put my trust in a close friend and they had turned they're back on me. This really knocked my opinion of Diana for the rest of the story and even right at the end when Sam and Astrid (his girlfriend) offer hospitality to Diana, I still felt unsure of her however, because Sam had been the leader and the hero from the beginning I felt obliged to trust his judgement and not to question his decisions as after all, they were the reason so many people had survived the FAYZ.

This deep connection that I built with many of the characters, lead me to start thinking in the same way as the children trapped beneath the barrier. At the start I desperately wanted them to escape so they could be with their parents again, but as the story progressed and I journeyed with the characters, I almost became adverse to the idea of the of the FAYZ wall coming down. The young people had learnt to build a society on their own and I as a reader had been there with them while they had committed atrocities that would appear outrageous and worthy of various prison sentences to the outside world, however being there with them, I understood that these children had no other choice and that the majority of them only did what they had to in order to survive. I wanted the wall to come down only because no one would survive very long unless it did. I was scared for the young people because I knew the outside world would not understand what had happened and they would try and prosecute and drag them through councelling and various therapies. The people who had survived the trauma of living in the FAYZ would not get the medals and the heroic welcome they deserved so badly.

Right at the end of the final book, after the acknowledgements, Grant wrote a short letter to his readers, thanking them for reading his books and taking the time to take the journey with Sam, Astrid, Diana, Caine and all the others. During the letter he explains that the main thing he wanted to achieve was that his readers would be able to feel for the characters and feel as if they were really there with them.

I feel that the author has achieve his goal many times over in the course of these books, and I feel that this is only emphasised by the fact that each relationship between reader and character is completely unique from any other one.

Finally I would just like to add that I would highly recommend this series to just about anyone, no matter how old you are.

This book probably should not be read by people who feel strongly against children being exposed to violent and life threatening situations.