clementine
Written on Aug 19, 2019
I actually find Atwood's speculative concepts well-developed and relevant to the real world. The extreme convergence of fundamental Christianity and patriarchy in The Handmaid's Tale has only become more convincing with time; the version of environmentally-ruinous late capitalism she envisions in the MaddAddam series is essentially plausible. The adoption of a prison-like model in a near-future American context also makes sense, as does the extreme version of modern capitalism presented. I guess I just wanted this to go further in its critique of the prison industrial system, when in the end it felt more like an interpersonal drama with a resolution that ultimately didn't say anything meaningful about society. The world in this novel seems similar to that in the MaddAddam trilogy, and while that series doesn't knock my socks off, its treatment of these ideas is a lot more complex and successful. The characters are really bland. There are various minor plot holes that are pretty annoying, especially when I normally think of Atwood as such a meticulous writer. I don't object to a comical treatment of dystopia (actually, I think that can be really great when done properly), but this just ended up feeling underdeveloped and banal. Definitely the worst of the twelve Atwood novels that I've read so far.