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Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale is a unique and horrifying dystopia. Many other readers have suggested that the world she depicts very closely mirrors current real-world problems. While she deserves considerable credit for identifying mechanisms of repression and impetuses to totalitarianism, I don't share the same expectation that our near future closely resembles the one she has imagined. Still, The Handmaid's Tale is a thought-provoking and compulsively readable story, even if the endin
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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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Oct 15, 2013
Jeff Franz-lien
rated it
really liked it
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review of another edition
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social-speculative-fiction

Sep 25, 2018
Julian
rated it
really liked it
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review of another edition
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post-apoc-zombie-horror

Jan 08, 2017
Jennifer Rose
rated it
it was amazing
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review of another edition
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home-bookshelf