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#61
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| Oryx & Crake is moving pretty fast to the top of my TBR list, I've read Blind Assassin, Alias Grace & Handmaid's Tale and they were really good. Margaret Atwood is becoming one of my favorite writers this year.
__________________ "Anyone who is capable of getting themselves made President should on no account be allowed to do the job." - Douglas Adams listal |
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#62
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__________________ A calm sea does not make a skilled sailor. |
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#63
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| The longer it's been since I read this, the better it gets in my mind. I really, really, really want to give it a reread, and it's only been a year! Brilliant book. |
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#64
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__________________ "Anyone who is capable of getting themselves made President should on no account be allowed to do the job." - Douglas Adams listal |
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#65
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The very same thing has happened to me. The more I think about Oryx and Crake the more I like it. And I liked it quite a bit when I read it.
__________________ I could get used to anything-that is, not really get used, but somehow voluntarily consent to endure it. - Fyodor Dostoevsky, Notes From Underground |
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#66
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| Okay, so I've been struggling to read Atwood since I was about 14 years old, and gave up around 18 and moved on. It's a few years later and I'm ready to try her again so am considering bumping one of her books up on my TBR list, should I try Oryx and Crake first or something else?
__________________ Allyson Grin and Begin Again my LJ: http://www.livejournal.com/users/prairie_girl My photos: http://ca.pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/a_sagin/my_photos My myspace: http://www.myspace.com/biscuitmunroe |
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#67
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| Prairie Girl, first of all, do you like sci-fi dystopic books? If you do, then I'd recommend Oryx and Crake, hands down. If sci-fi's not your thing, then I'd suggest Alias Grace or The Blind Assassin for a re-introduction to Atwood. Last night I was mulling over the things I like about Atwood's writing. It occurred to me that she's really good at revealing the bitch that lurks within most of us women. She's not afraid of showing all the cattiness and vulnerability, the dependence/independence struggle, the admirable and the not so. I used to find her writing extremely depressing. It took me years before I realized that what I saw as darkness was a reality in her writing about women that I wasn't quite ready to accept. |
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#68
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| Her observations of women are excellent. I also like the way she weaves class and human weakness into her books (the ones that I've read anyway). Out of 'The Handmaid's Tale', 'Blind Assassin' and 'Oryx and Crake', my favourite is 'Blind Assassin' but all three have left me thinking about the various themes that run through them. |
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#69
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__________________ A calm sea does not make a skilled sailor. |
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#70
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I just know that I will enjoy her, it's just getting myself to the point where I'm able too. I have a feeling I might be there now.
__________________ Allyson Grin and Begin Again my LJ: http://www.livejournal.com/users/prairie_girl My photos: http://ca.pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/a_sagin/my_photos My myspace: http://www.myspace.com/biscuitmunroe |
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#71
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Atwood writes beautifully. There are few (if any) wasted words and she develops her characters so well that I felt totally engaged with them. It's a very different book to 'The Handmaid's Tale' and 'Oryx and Crake' in that it is set in the past but Atwood's style still comes through. There is also another story that runs through; a novel within a novel. I really hope you give it go - let us all know what you think. |
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#72
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__________________ A calm sea does not make a skilled sailor. |
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#73
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| Damn. She was in Reykjavík last week and I didn't realise. :( |
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#74
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| Margaret Atwood: Queen of CanLit
__________________ I could get used to anything-that is, not really get used, but somehow voluntarily consent to endure it. - Fyodor Dostoevsky, Notes From Underground |
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#75
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| Hi I'm not sure what to read next from Atwood. I read A handmaid's tale a while back and loved it! Eager to read something else from her I picked up The robber bride. While the robber bride wasn't bad, (the characters were very real which is a big plus) it wasn't great either. I found my self wishing I could finish the book and read something more, well entertaining; whereas with A handmaid's tale I wished to book wouldn't end. I need a suggestion what to read next from her. If I enjoy the next thing I read from her I'll be a fan, else I might dismiss her as a average writer with flashes of brilliance, which might be an injustice to someone able to write two such uniquely different books.
__________________ "...That's some catch, that Catch-22', he observerd. 'It's the best there is', Doc Daneeka agreed.." - Catch-22 Joseph Heller |
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