The doyenne of Canadian literature (she's won both a Booker and a
Giller Prize), the versatile Atwood has an uncanny ability to write in
a number of literary genres. Like The Handmaid's Tale, her latest work
is set in a near future that is all too realistic and almost too
terrifying to contemplate. Having once led a life of comfort and
self-indulgence, Jimmy, now known as Snowman, has survived an
ecological disaster that has destroyed the world as we know it. As he
struggles to function without everything he once knew, including time,
Snowman reflects on the past, on his relationships with two characters
named Oryx and Crake, and on the role of each individual in the
destruction of the natural world. From its opening scene, in which the
children of Crake scavenge through debris, to its horrifying
conclusion, this novel challenges the reader, cleverly pairing
familiar aspects of the world with parts that have been irrevocably
changed. A powerful and perturbing glimpse into a dark future, this is
Atwood's impassioned plea for responsible management of our human,
scientific, and natural resources and a novel that will cast long and
lingering shadows in the reader's mind, well after the book is closed.
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16/12/2018 Last update