reviews
Dec 15, 2011
I always have trouble reviewing books that I have studied at school, because I have so much to say and not enough patience to explain it properly. In any case, I studied (read: memorised) this book for an oral, and as a result it is one of my all-time favourite books.
Cat's Eye is about the painter Elaine Risley's journey back to the city of her childhood, Toronto, for a retrospective exhibition of her work. This trip is a catalyst for the revelation of the traumatic memories of the w More...
Cat's Eye is about the painter Elaine Risley's journey back to the city of her childhood, Toronto, for a retrospective exhibition of her work. This trip is a catalyst for the revelation of the traumatic memories of the w More...
18 comments
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(41 people liked it)
Sep 16, 2011
i know for a fact that books were written and published after this one, but i can't for the life of me understand why.
125 comments
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(62 people liked it)
Nov 30, 2011
Cordelia: Hey! You think I'm never lonely because I'm so cute and popular? I can be surrounded by people and be completely alone. It's not like any of them really know me. I don't even know if they like me half the time. People just want to be in a popular zone. Sometimes when I talk, everyone's so busy agreeing with me, they don't hear a word I say.
Buffy: Well, if you feel so alone, then why do you work so hard at being popular?
Cordelia: Well, it beats being alone all by yourself.
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Buffy: Well, if you feel so alone, then why do you work so hard at being popular?
Cordelia: Well, it beats being alone all by yourself.
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10 comments
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(13 people liked it)
Dec 16, 2009
"Another belief of mine: that everyone else my age is an adult, whereas I am merely in disguise."
Simply put, I worship this book.
Cat’s Eye follows the controversial painter Elaine as she reflects upon her childhood and younger years when she returns to Toronto (the city of her youth) for a retrospective of her works. Her reflections stir up memories of friendship, longing, betrayal, love, hate, and pain. Especially haunting are her memories of Cordelia, a chil More...
Simply put, I worship this book.
Cat’s Eye follows the controversial painter Elaine as she reflects upon her childhood and younger years when she returns to Toronto (the city of her youth) for a retrospective of her works. Her reflections stir up memories of friendship, longing, betrayal, love, hate, and pain. Especially haunting are her memories of Cordelia, a chil More...
2 comments
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(13 people liked it)
Jul 21, 2011
Upon rereading in 2011: I have little to add, except to say that it was even more astonishing on the second-go-round.
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I have no words (well, in a manner of speaking) to describe my love for this book. I finished it really, really late the other night after a night out with some friends and was completely overwhelmed. It's taken me a few days to review it, just because of how emotionally devastating the book is.
Cat's Eye (from the almost-always-fabulous At More...
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I have no words (well, in a manner of speaking) to describe my love for this book. I finished it really, really late the other night after a night out with some friends and was completely overwhelmed. It's taken me a few days to review it, just because of how emotionally devastating the book is.
Cat's Eye (from the almost-always-fabulous At More...
5 comments
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(5 people liked it)
Mar 15, 2011
“There are things I need to ask her. Not what happened, back then in the time I lost, because now I know that. I need to ask her why.
If she remembers. Perhaps she’s forgotten the bad things, what she said to me, what she did. Or she does remember them, but in a minor way, as if remembering a game, or a single prank, a single trivial secret, of the kind girls tell and then forget.
She will have her own version. I am not the centre of her story, because she herself is More...
If she remembers. Perhaps she’s forgotten the bad things, what she said to me, what she did. Or she does remember them, but in a minor way, as if remembering a game, or a single prank, a single trivial secret, of the kind girls tell and then forget.
She will have her own version. I am not the centre of her story, because she herself is More...
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(3 people liked it)
Jan 17, 2011
I am always so surprised by how cruel girls can be to each other. I am afraid that I am more like Elaine's parents- not exactly part of the mainstream of life. The weaving of the story from past to present, the interplay of the characters, growth of Elaine and shifts of power and focus were all well done to my mind. I often find that the actual story Margaret Atwood writes about is not as compelling as her details and work with the characters. There is an everyday-ness about them and a seeming n
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(3 people liked it)
Mar 07, 2008
Having read The Handmaid's Tale, and loving it, and reading The Robber Bride, and not loving it (at all), I was unsure how I would feel about my third Margaret Atwood tale.
While not being able to immerse myself into the story as quickly or as deeply as The Handmaid's Tale, I found the book to instead be a slow burn, gradually drawing me in and not letting go until the end.
In Cat's Eye, Atwood's protagonist reflects on the development of relationships between women (gir More...
While not being able to immerse myself into the story as quickly or as deeply as The Handmaid's Tale, I found the book to instead be a slow burn, gradually drawing me in and not letting go until the end.
In Cat's Eye, Atwood's protagonist reflects on the development of relationships between women (gir More...
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(4 people liked it)
Jan 15, 2008
Apparently, it’s extremely difficult to grow up female, and members of the fairer sex can be cruel and unusual in their treatment of each other both in childhood and beyond. How much of a fool am I that I didn’t discover this earlier?
I had difficulty getting into this book, and fought the urge to put it down and never resume reading until around page 300. Following the life of our fictitious narrator, I had difficulty finding something to which I could relate until she hit college More...
I had difficulty getting into this book, and fought the urge to put it down and never resume reading until around page 300. Following the life of our fictitious narrator, I had difficulty finding something to which I could relate until she hit college More...
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(4 people liked it)
Dec 05, 2007
This one did not live up to my Atwood expectations after Blind Assassin and Handmaid's Tale. The narrator spent way too much time lamenting her aging self and by page 445 I had no sympathy for her. The flashbacks to her childhood and adolescence were enthralling and at times visceral. Her younger self was well explicated and felt very real to me; the older Elaine felt flat. Every comment she made was about how old she was, how everything had changed, how she used to do this or act that way. I GE
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(8 people liked it)
Jan 05, 2008
I was thrilled when I first found Margaret Atwood's books about two years ago, and as I've been slowly working my way through them I've started to become disillusioned that they all seem to be similar to each other. The last one I read before this was the Robber Bride, and both books have a kind of annoying habit of having the main (female) characters think obsessively about other peripheral females who have wronged them or hurt them in some way. I got tired of hearing about Zenia in Robber Brid
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(3 people liked it)
Dec 11, 2008
I know people who have very specific conditions for books they read -- one who doesn't like any book that portrays adultery in a positive light, another who hates anything in first person. I like to think I don't have any of these, but that's kind of a lie: I hate passive characters.
Elaine's the most passive character in any book I can remember reading this year, and she's the protagonist and narrator to boot. She just sat around and waited for the book to happen to her, and meanwhil More...
Elaine's the most passive character in any book I can remember reading this year, and she's the protagonist and narrator to boot. She just sat around and waited for the book to happen to her, and meanwhil More...
3 comments
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(5 people liked it)
Nov 16, 2007
I’d read Atwood’s Handmaid’s Tale and Oryx and Crake, so I thought I had her pegged as to what kind of novelist she is. But this book has no excursions into the future and mores. It’s an in depth exploration of our experiences as children and how they shape our lives.
The story is mostly told in flashbacks. A woman comes to Toronto for a retrospective showing of her art. She hasn’t been there in many years, and now finding herself there she is awash in memories, especially those i More...
The story is mostly told in flashbacks. A woman comes to Toronto for a retrospective showing of her art. She hasn’t been there in many years, and now finding herself there she is awash in memories, especially those i More...
5 comments
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(3 people liked it)
Dec 05, 2008
This story follows the life of Elaine, from when she was in the "wilds" of Canada with her parents, to when they first moved into a house near Toronto. The story weaves in and out of the 'present' and her past, expanding on who she is as a person and how she relates to those around her.
At times heartbreaking, it offers a glimpse into how life was during what I presumed to be the 40's and 50's. (There are some historical things you need to know to understand parts of the b More...
At times heartbreaking, it offers a glimpse into how life was during what I presumed to be the 40's and 50's. (There are some historical things you need to know to understand parts of the b More...
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(1 person liked it)
Jan 24, 2009
This book has been on my must-read list for a long time, so I was very excited to finally get my hands on a copy. Unfortunately, as much as I tried, I did not love this book. The language was absolutely stunning, with scenes rendered with such poetic language and detail that I felt I was in the scene. The problem was that the scenes Atwood described were so miserable, I did not want to be there. I have never been to Toronto, and after reading this book, I never want to go. I can't imagine a
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2 comments
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(5 people liked it)
Oct 01, 2008
No one ever explicitly recommended Margaret Atwood to me. But I had heard her name mentioned in the periphery of my literary world now and again. When I picked up The Handmaid's Tale this summer, I couldn't believe I had never read it before. I thought it was brilliant. So I was anxious to find time this fall to read Cat's Eye. And again I am amazed that my life has not revolved around this author from day one. I'm rendered speechless by how brilliantly Atwood can tell a story. There were
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(1 person liked it)
Mar 03, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers.
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(1 person liked it)
Dec 25, 2009
I read this book probably at the beginning of this year. It didn't take me as long as the Book Thief, but it took a really long time to get through, and it didn't necessarily stick with me like I wanted it to. It was a little too abstract for my tastes.
However, I love Margaret Atwood, and I did appreciate the themes in this book. The reason I'm reviewing it now is because it was quite similar to the Myth of You and Me. From the POV of a woman reminiscing about a best friend from her More...
However, I love Margaret Atwood, and I did appreciate the themes in this book. The reason I'm reviewing it now is because it was quite similar to the Myth of You and Me. From the POV of a woman reminiscing about a best friend from her More...
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(1 person liked it)
Jun 24, 2007
I thought The Handmaid's Tale was my favorite Atwood. Then I read Oryx and Crake and figured nothing could ever top that. Both of those books are futuristic dystopias, which is one of my all-time favorite genres. So when I picked up Cat's Eye, a humdrum "regular" novel, it was mainly because I love Atwood's prose. I wasn't expecting it to become my new favorite Atwood novel, let alone the book that would define my young adulthood, as Ender's Game had defined my adolescence, and
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(8 people liked it)
Aug 18, 2008
I don't know what it is with Margaret Atwood. I found Handmaid's Tale to be one of the most thought provoking, wonderfully written books I've ever read in my life. However, every other book I have picked up by her has fallen short. In my experience, I have to be able to relate to at least one of the characters. While I could relate to some of the things that happened in this book, I didn't find myself relating the actual character and her motivations. It left me frustrated.
All in al More...
All in al More...
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(1 person liked it)
Nov 02, 2008
I'm so happy I finally gave myself the chance to read Margaret Atwood. "Cat's Eye" was so beautiful. I was moved by the way in which Atwood displays and dissects the nuances of female relationships as well as her general art of description and imagery. "Cat's Eye" is a mirror that prompted me to examine my own life and self, besides being beautifully written and full of seductively tangible prose. Elaine's perspective may have been before I was born, but I definitely felt the
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(1 person liked it)
Jan 04, 2010
Long before there was "Mean Girls," Margaret Atwood was writing about the complexities and cruelties inherrent in young, female friendships, and how it has long-term effects. The novel's protagonist, Elaine, is a celebrated, yet controversial, painter showing off her work in a gallery. Her work represents the turmoil locked inside her, depictions of people and events from her past. The novel continuously skips from the present to the past to show just how Elaine's girlhood remains a s
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Jan 21, 2009
I liked Cat's Eye, but it made me feel terrible.
This is one of those books that I felt unprepared for. There is so much here. I became overwhelmed with the themes and commentaries and issues. So I focused on the story.
I loved reading about Elaine's childhood. I loved the description of the time, the scene, the day to day life of another generation. The children were fascinating in their meanness, a meanness I remember. Was I that mean? The idea that I may have been is hea More...
This is one of those books that I felt unprepared for. There is so much here. I became overwhelmed with the themes and commentaries and issues. So I focused on the story.
I loved reading about Elaine's childhood. I loved the description of the time, the scene, the day to day life of another generation. The children were fascinating in their meanness, a meanness I remember. Was I that mean? The idea that I may have been is hea More...
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(2 people liked it)
Dec 05, 2011
I always think Atwood is going to be harder to read than she actually is, though this might be because I gravitate toward her books about women and their complicated, often hurtful, relationships with each other.
However, because of this, it was also emotionally wearing to read. I was bullied as a child when I was around Elaine's age and there were times when I had to put the book down because my skin was crawling at the spot-on voices of Elaine's friends, the things they said to and *how* More...
However, because of this, it was also emotionally wearing to read. I was bullied as a child when I was around Elaine's age and there were times when I had to put the book down because my skin was crawling at the spot-on voices of Elaine's friends, the things they said to and *how* More...
Nov 08, 2011
I deeply enjoy Atwood’s storytelling and style. Within a few pages I felt like I was putting on a warm, comfy sweater. Hello, old friend. Nice to be swaddled by you again. I like the tool that Atwood uses here as well as in other stories, the progressive flashback. Action takes place primarily in the past, but secondarily in the present too. Both sections compliment each other and reveal parts of the story.
The story pulled me in right away. The details of young Elaine’s life a More...
The story pulled me in right away. The details of young Elaine’s life a More...
Oct 25, 2011
Okay, good reads annoys me because this book was a true 3.5 - a solid B+ book. Maybe I'll just start doing ratings in terms of letter grades.
Anways, Cat's Eye. The first half of this book is excellent, almost too real, and the second half is a little more lackluster. You can tell that the first part is a true reflection and account of what happened to Margaret Atwood (or something similar) as a child and the latter is her fictional account of what happened to that version of her.
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Anways, Cat's Eye. The first half of this book is excellent, almost too real, and the second half is a little more lackluster. You can tell that the first part is a true reflection and account of what happened to Margaret Atwood (or something similar) as a child and the latter is her fictional account of what happened to that version of her.
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(1 person liked it)
Oct 20, 2011
Prachtig boek!! Eerder las ik haar 'de blinde huurmoordenaar', waar ik nog steeds veel aan denk. Dus de verwachtingen waren hooggespannen.
Ik vond het begin niks aan, maar na ongeveer 120 p. kwam het ineens in een stroomversnelling. Het verhaal is heel zwaar, dus 'even snel uitlezen' lukte me niet.
Waarover gaat het? Elaine Risley, schilderes, keert op 50-jarige leeftijd terug naar Toronto, de stad waar ze opgroeide, omdat er daar een overzichtstentoonstelling wordt georganisee More...
Ik vond het begin niks aan, maar na ongeveer 120 p. kwam het ineens in een stroomversnelling. Het verhaal is heel zwaar, dus 'even snel uitlezen' lukte me niet.
Waarover gaat het? Elaine Risley, schilderes, keert op 50-jarige leeftijd terug naar Toronto, de stad waar ze opgroeide, omdat er daar een overzichtstentoonstelling wordt georganisee More...
Oct 03, 2011
Elaine Risley, Forty-something with a reputation as a controversial painter returns home for the opening of her new gallery exhibit. She takes us from the past to the present and to the past again as she reminisces about her childhood.
It is in this manner that Elaine tries to shed light on how she has grown to be the woman she has become. Her most meaningful relationship seems to be with her
one time childhood friend/tormentor, Cordelia, who is now mostly physically absent in Elai More...
It is in this manner that Elaine tries to shed light on how she has grown to be the woman she has become. Her most meaningful relationship seems to be with her
one time childhood friend/tormentor, Cordelia, who is now mostly physically absent in Elai More...
Aug 18, 2011
I wasn’t sure what I would think of this novel. I mean, I wasn’t sure where it would go. Ultimately, there is little more to it than a middle aged women thinking through her past as far as she can remember it. the surprise being that apparently much of her older memories had been suppressed by a somewhat traumatic experience brought on by her supposed friends at the time.
I thought the protagonist was fairly weak. I also didn’t really like her. In the first third of the book she is bullied and yo
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Jun 28, 2011
Margaret Atwood is a freakin' genius, she's one of my favourite novelists in the world, and Cat's Eye may, after a bit of reflection, be the best thing of hers that I've read yet (A Handmaid's Tale, a sci-fi examination of the politics of women's bodies, is the other contender, in case anybody's interested). I've mentioned before in this blog that I have a very short list of authors of whom I will, before I die, read their complete works. Cat's Eye puts Margaret Atwood on that list. It's that fr
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