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Finally getting around to this with the MaddAddam release. Picked up the audio book on a whim.
What is it about dystopian fiction that is so incredibly readable? I know I'm enjoying an audiobook when I give up on the CDs, and just pick up the novel so I can get through it faster. I wanted to finish this so badly that when I couldn't get it immediately from the library, I went home and bought it on my Nook.
The flashback structure, the terrifying plague concept, the terrible reality of the future ...more
What is it about dystopian fiction that is so incredibly readable? I know I'm enjoying an audiobook when I give up on the CDs, and just pick up the novel so I can get through it faster. I wanted to finish this so badly that when I couldn't get it immediately from the library, I went home and bought it on my Nook.
The flashback structure, the terrifying plague concept, the terrible reality of the future ...more

This has been a great ride. This is how science fiction should be done. I don't know that it is science fiction (I know Atwood isn't crazy about it), but it's an excellent model. It's an occasionally infuriatingly (and intentionally) myopic story about the dystopian apocalypse. We spend so much time in the little life of the main character, we barely get to know one of the title characters, and don’t have any sense of the big thing-that-makes-it-science-fiction-kinda until the last quarter of th
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This book was unlike any that I have read before, but I totally dug it. As I dicussed with one of my colleagues, this book is "scary" in that all of the things which have happened in the world that Atwood creates are completely believable. The intellectuals and elites live in guarded Compounds, while the regular folks live in the dingy, dirty Pleeblands, viruses and bacteria can kill people in a second, and animals are being spliced and bred for their organs. Snowman, the narrator, appears to be
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This was a fast but decidedly not easy read. Snowman, also known as Jimmy, has had a sheltered existence, living under the shadows of his genetic engineer of a father and his brilliant compatriot Crake. He and Crake happen to become obsessed with the same underage girl, Oryx, they see in a porn. Jimmy/Snowman is living in a world of bioengineering and genetic hybrids developed by scientists for reasons both practical and grandiose. As a reader, I had a hard time understanding exactly the world b
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Oryx and Crake (the first in the MaddAddam Trilogy) is yet another eerie concoction effortlessly thrown together by the brilliant Margaret Atwood. Human beings, just like in The Handmaid's Tale, are confronted with the harsh reality of their own making. Her writing is convincing, because it is based on contemporary issues like (fear of) terrorism, overpopulation and the resulting food shortage. Climate change, be it human-induced or part of a natural cycle, has made many parts of the world inhab
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I love Margaret Atwood, so I wanted to love this book...but I didn't. It was the usual blunt yet engaging style that is Atwood's signature, but the story itself was thin and I think she tried a little too hard to show this potential future rather than just telling us about it. This review is a little vague because I don't want to give too much plot away because I think the best way to read this book is to dive in blindly.
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Aug 30, 2010
Terri FL
added it


Jun 07, 2014
Amy
marked it as to-read