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I first read this book soon after it was published and just re-read it a quarter century later. This is a seminal work about gender roles that is often mistaken as a rant against religion. Atwood needed a dystopia in which to set her tale of Offred. She chose a religious dystopia, perhaps because there was a raging paranoia about the "Religious Right" in the 1980's that gave it a natural audience. But despite most comments you see posted about this novel, it is about gender roles, not a religion
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A scary but real possibility in the present or future. Set in an alternate reality that even though takes place in the 1990s or turn of the 21st century is still something that could occur even now.
This book still remains current in the themes that it portrays in social injustice, fears and suffrage during totalitarian regimes and the plight to remain human and empathic in a world divided and shamed for sexual desires, individuality and basically being a female.
This book still remains current in the themes that it portrays in social injustice, fears and suffrage during totalitarian regimes and the plight to remain human and empathic in a world divided and shamed for sexual desires, individuality and basically being a female.

May 19, 2013
Marla
rated it
it was amazing
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
dystopian,
books-i-own
Entirely different than I expected! I know that movies rarely follow books properly but this is SO different it is almost 2 different things entirely! The book FAR exceeds the movie.


Apr 14, 2015
NormaCenva
rated it
it was amazing
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
audible-co-uk,
audiobooks