Our Shared Shelf discussion
MAY/JUNE The Handmaid's Tale
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More of Atwood's Work?
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Alias Grace is another great story, it is about another female lead who is also imprisoned due to her gender limitations but then also because of a crime that is committed. I should mention that this novel is based on true events that happened in the 1840's. It centre's around mental illness and during Grace's POV we never really know when she is either speaking or thinking. Another great story that will stay with you for a very long time, is Grace a murderess or is she suffering from a split personality illness?



Sorry, but








But Handmaid's Tale is so good and I've heard other works of hers so highly lauded that I figure it's her one bad one of the batch and I'm not scared off from her :)





This is an interesting point.
As someone who is some thirty years older than Kate..."
That's definitely a good point, and something I would encourage everyone to do! I personally have talked a lot with my grandmother about her past, but older people sometimes aren't as comfortable in expressing their feelings. It's only been in the last 20 years that she was able to talk about events that happened in the war (I'm from Austria, so she was in the middle of the second world war), and while I know the timeline of her life, she will never tell me in details how she feels right now or how she felt back then.
Interesting how some people really didn't like the book! I can understand it if you've stopped halfway though.

The Atwood I read after handmaid's tale was the edible woman. It's very different than the dystopian nature of HT but it has a feminist undertone in what appears to be a contemporary situation of a girl who doesn't know what she wants out of life anymore.
The second thing I've fallen in love with is the writing style of Margaret Atwood. This is the first of her books I've read and I want more. Therefore I would love if all of you, who have read more of her work, could give your best recomendations for the next Atwood novel to dive in to after Handmaid's Tale! Since this is a feminist book club, maybe especially books that suits that theme?