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In the epilogue of A Handmaiden's Tale, a group of fictional scholars comment on Offred's story and reflect about the society of Gilead much as real historians will about a by-gone period of history. With detachment and an unwillingness to judge neither the oppressors nor the oppressed.
While reading these last few pages it slowly dawned on me why this book is (will be?) considered a classic. Because, here's the thing: no part of Atwood's fictional world is unrealistic. Of course, women’s bodies ...more
While reading these last few pages it slowly dawned on me why this book is (will be?) considered a classic. Because, here's the thing: no part of Atwood's fictional world is unrealistic. Of course, women’s bodies ...more

5 stars
content warnings
- Sexism
- Homophobia
- Mention of rape
review (2020)
This book blows my mind every time. It's so well written with lines that hit in just the right spaces. It's a story that hurts and a story that heals at the same time. Like our protagonist, I wish that I could tell you this was a happy story, but instead I'll tell you it's a hopeful story. It's a story about keeping hope and having it in even the worst of times. And it's a story about revolution brewing, even in the c ...more
content warnings
- Sexism
- Homophobia
- Mention of rape
review (2020)
This book blows my mind every time. It's so well written with lines that hit in just the right spaces. It's a story that hurts and a story that heals at the same time. Like our protagonist, I wish that I could tell you this was a happy story, but instead I'll tell you it's a hopeful story. It's a story about keeping hope and having it in even the worst of times. And it's a story about revolution brewing, even in the c ...more

Newer edition.
But there’s a literary form I haven’t mentioned yet: the literature of witness. Offred records her story as best she can; then she hides it, trusting that it may be discovered later, by someone who is free to understand it and share it. This is an act of hope: every recorded story implies a future reader. Robinson Crusoe keeps a journal. So did Samuel Pepys, in which he chronicled the Great Fire of London. So did many who lived during the Black Death, although their accounts oft...more

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