What do you think?
Rate this book


96 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1966
‘The shadows of the chessmen
stretch, fall across her: she
is obsessed by history;
each wooden totem rises
like the cairn of an event.’
‘that the whole point
for them
of going round and round
is (faster / slower)
going round and round,’

Picked this up in a book store, because I've read what feels like almost every Margaret Atwood fictional book. I've truly never knew she even wrote poetry, and it's jarring. But The Circle Game: Poems being her first major poetry collection checks out.
For one, Atwood is known to write about relationships, love, and meaning within the detail. She writes this very, very well. Just take this excerpt as an example:
"Love is an awkward word. Not what I mean and too much like magazine stories in stilted dentists' waiting rooms. How can anyone use it? I'd rather say: I like your lean spine or your eyebrows or your shoes but just by standing there and being awkward, you force me to speak love."
When I read Atwood, I always feel like every single one of my five senses is being tickled or prodded at. Like a nagging sense of wonder, her social critiques on power, and gender within, stick around my mind. There are pieces that feel disorienting, or out of place with the collection. Otherwise, interesting and captivating to read!