Cat's Eye by Margaret Atwood

Cat's Eye (Bloomsbury Modern Library) (New Portway Large Print Books)

by Margaret Atwood

By the author of The Handmaid's Tale and Alias Grace

Elaine Risley, a painter, returns to Toronto to find herself overwhelmed by her past. Memories of childhood - unbearable betrayals and cruelties - surface relentlessly, forcing her to confront the spectre of Cordelia, once her best friend and tormentor, who has haunted her for forty years.

'Not since Graham Greene has a novelist captured so forcefully the relationship between school bully and victim...Atwood's games are played, exquisitely, by little girls' LISTENER
An exceptional novel from the winner of the 2000 Booker Prize

Reviewed by clementine on

5 of 5 stars

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This is still one of my favourites, five years later - so brutal and unflinching. Margaret Atwood has done a bit of everything, but I think her realistic fiction is perhaps her strongest work.

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Review 01/31/2012:

I don't know what I was expecting with this book, but it certainly wasn't what I ended up reading. I thought I would enjoy it, but I didn't think I would be so immersed in it, so saturated with the vivid descriptions. Reading Cat's Eye is like drowning. That sounds negative, but it's the only way I can think to describe it: it's so immersive, and I felt like I was choking for air the entire time. It is so dark and disturbing.

I don't know how this book would read to somebody else, but for me it was such an odd experience because I know what she's writing about. I know what Elaine went through in her childhood. I felt those emotions so strongly, because I have felt them before in my life. That period was 1/3 of my life ago, and as soon as I started reading Cat's Eye it felt as if those experiences were still new. Even after all these years, it's so raw.

I don't know. I can't get all my emotions in order. I was discussing this book in class the other day, and I almost started crying. I surprised myself with that. I didn't realize how much it was affecting me.

This isn't a book that I would normally give five stars to. It's just not my usual type of book, really. But I can't find one flaw in it, and I know it's going to stick with me, as much as I might like to forget about it. It's going to disturb me for a long time.

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