Adina's Reviews > The Handmaid’s Tale
The Handmaid’s Tale (The Handmaid's Tale, #1)
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Update 2022: As Stephen King wrote on Twitter: Welcome to The Handmaid's Tale
I. Night
I am lying awake in my bed. I keep my eyes closed and beg sleep to come. Fruitlessly! Outside, the rain is whipping the windows without mercy. My husband is sleeping next to me, oblivious to my struggle. I need my thoughts to go away. I need to forget that I just finished the Handmaid's Tale and its effect on me. I knew I should have resumed myself to the self-imposed daily quota of 10%. But no. I had to read the last 30 % in one go and now I can't sleep because of it. It’s like a shot of caffeine to my veins. How can I review such a book? How can I explain how I feel? I don’t even know. I can't say I enjoyed it. I was both dreading and expecting to open the pages. I wanted it to be over, like I want a punishment to be over. It made me choke; I was uncomfortable and in pain the whole 312 pages. However, I was also in awe to the power and poetry of Atwood's writing. The last novel they made me feel this way was Never Let Me Go. I can still smell the heavy the heavy atmosphere. Submission! This is it. Both were about submission to a terrible destiny. I could not understand and accept it then and I cannot do it now. Or can I? What would I do to survive, if submission were the only hope? There is a knot in my throat.
What she wrote in this novel, the world she created is absurd isn't it? It cannot happen, not in a million years, right? We are past this, we have evolved enough. We cannot get there. It would be terrible, unthinkable. It is absurd to think that people’s will can be so easily obliterated, that minds can be erased and that fear can rule one’s life into submission. And still... Kim Jung-Un in Korea, Putin in Russia, more recently the election in Turkey. Trump is just as dangerous. Le Pen can become the next president in France. Yes the daughter of the man that said that Holocaust did not exist. The world is a dangerous place and freedom is fragile. We need to open our eyes, be vigilant and never be complacent with what we have so it is not taken from us.
I still cannot sleep. The rain becomes even more punishing. My mind races. I think about the past of my country. In the end of the novel, at Historical Notes, there were a few examples of other similar regimes that reacted as Gilead. It said that Romania has anticipated Gilead in the eighties by banning all forms of birth control, and imposing other restrictions. How I wished this was also part of the author’s imagination. Ok, there were no compulsory pregnancy tests and promotion did not depend on fertility but a decree was passed by Ceausescu, our last communist president where all birth control and abortion was banned. The punishment for not complying was severe; women were imprisoned and beaten to confess. During the 20 years when the decree was in place, more than 10,000 women died from illegal, mostly home-made abortions. Another world where men controlled women’s body. Not so long ago. We cannot go back to that, can we?
Motherhood. Another hurtful subject. To have your child taken away from you. To be unable to have a child and have your husband conceive with someone else while you watch. A nightmare for any woman (or man). No more love, no more sex for pleasure. No, here I draw the line. I cannot see this happen. And still…
Historical Notes
The above memoir of a distressed reader that could not sleep because of the Handmaid’s Tale, was found in the notes of a mobile phone. It is hard to identify the person that wrote the document as there were probably many people that lost sleep over this novel in Atwood’s republic. She tends to write some uncomfortable stuff, that author. We cannot confirm the authenticity of the document, still the disturbed tone suggests that the person actually read the Handmaid’s Tale and was deeply impressed by it. And scared.
P.S. I found in another review an interesting article wrote by Atwood where she discusses the book. https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/10/bo...
I. Night
I am lying awake in my bed. I keep my eyes closed and beg sleep to come. Fruitlessly! Outside, the rain is whipping the windows without mercy. My husband is sleeping next to me, oblivious to my struggle. I need my thoughts to go away. I need to forget that I just finished the Handmaid's Tale and its effect on me. I knew I should have resumed myself to the self-imposed daily quota of 10%. But no. I had to read the last 30 % in one go and now I can't sleep because of it. It’s like a shot of caffeine to my veins. How can I review such a book? How can I explain how I feel? I don’t even know. I can't say I enjoyed it. I was both dreading and expecting to open the pages. I wanted it to be over, like I want a punishment to be over. It made me choke; I was uncomfortable and in pain the whole 312 pages. However, I was also in awe to the power and poetry of Atwood's writing. The last novel they made me feel this way was Never Let Me Go. I can still smell the heavy the heavy atmosphere. Submission! This is it. Both were about submission to a terrible destiny. I could not understand and accept it then and I cannot do it now. Or can I? What would I do to survive, if submission were the only hope? There is a knot in my throat.
What she wrote in this novel, the world she created is absurd isn't it? It cannot happen, not in a million years, right? We are past this, we have evolved enough. We cannot get there. It would be terrible, unthinkable. It is absurd to think that people’s will can be so easily obliterated, that minds can be erased and that fear can rule one’s life into submission. And still... Kim Jung-Un in Korea, Putin in Russia, more recently the election in Turkey. Trump is just as dangerous. Le Pen can become the next president in France. Yes the daughter of the man that said that Holocaust did not exist. The world is a dangerous place and freedom is fragile. We need to open our eyes, be vigilant and never be complacent with what we have so it is not taken from us.
I still cannot sleep. The rain becomes even more punishing. My mind races. I think about the past of my country. In the end of the novel, at Historical Notes, there were a few examples of other similar regimes that reacted as Gilead. It said that Romania has anticipated Gilead in the eighties by banning all forms of birth control, and imposing other restrictions. How I wished this was also part of the author’s imagination. Ok, there were no compulsory pregnancy tests and promotion did not depend on fertility but a decree was passed by Ceausescu, our last communist president where all birth control and abortion was banned. The punishment for not complying was severe; women were imprisoned and beaten to confess. During the 20 years when the decree was in place, more than 10,000 women died from illegal, mostly home-made abortions. Another world where men controlled women’s body. Not so long ago. We cannot go back to that, can we?
Motherhood. Another hurtful subject. To have your child taken away from you. To be unable to have a child and have your husband conceive with someone else while you watch. A nightmare for any woman (or man). No more love, no more sex for pleasure. No, here I draw the line. I cannot see this happen. And still…
Historical Notes
The above memoir of a distressed reader that could not sleep because of the Handmaid’s Tale, was found in the notes of a mobile phone. It is hard to identify the person that wrote the document as there were probably many people that lost sleep over this novel in Atwood’s republic. She tends to write some uncomfortable stuff, that author. We cannot confirm the authenticity of the document, still the disturbed tone suggests that the person actually read the Handmaid’s Tale and was deeply impressed by it. And scared.
P.S. I found in another review an interesting article wrote by Atwood where she discusses the book. https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/10/bo...
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Reading Progress
September 9, 2014
– Shelved
September 9, 2014
– Shelved as:
dystopia
September 9, 2014
– Shelved as:
classics
September 9, 2014
– Shelved as:
fantasy-sf
September 29, 2014
– Shelved as:
to-read
April 9, 2017
–
Started Reading
April 20, 2017
–
Finished Reading
January 29, 2018
– Shelved as:
1001
October 10, 2018
– Shelved as:
canada
Comments Showing 1-50 of 153 (153 new)
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Lauren (Shakespeare & Whisky)
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rated it 5 stars
Apr 12, 2017 12:23AM
This is a classic. I read it as a teenager. It was so chilling and wonderful in a terrifying way.
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Lauren (Shakespeare & Whisky) wrote: "This is a classic. I read it as a teenager. It was so chilling and wonderful in a terrifying way." It is terrifying. I am reading it to be prepared for the series.
Lauren (Shakespeare & Whisky) wrote: "I'm so excited about that. What date is it coming out? Pretty sure it's this month." On 26th, this month
Trudie wrote: "I love this book, I think I might reread it before I watch the series." It is very well written and very disturbing. I can't read too much at once.
Great review, Adina. I had very similiar feelings reading that novel. I was scared and observing the world today still I am. I wanted some ray of hope and still I do. Also, your mention about Ishiguro's novel- agree once again. It's not an easy reading and I can share your anger and anxiety. Thanks for writing it.
I bought this the other day and now, thanks to your review I'm so excited to pick it up! (also you probably meant to write Le Pen and not Hollande, didn't you?)
Agnieszka wrote: "Great review, Adina. I had very similiar feelings reading that novel. I was scared and observing the world today still I am. I wanted some ray of hope and still I do. Also, your mention about Ishig..." Thank you! Inspiration comes in the most unexpected moments :) It is an anxiety creating novel. With the direction Poland is going right now I can understand why you are still scared.
Lydia wrote: "I bought this the other day and now, thanks to your review I'm so excited to pick it up! (also you probably meant to write Le Pen and not Hollande, didn't you?)" It is worth the excitement. I meant Le Pen, thanks for correcting me. Poor Hollande has 4% popularity, he is no danger to no one.
Great review, Adina. This book made an enormous impact on me. I read it decades ago. It is one of my most favorite books ever. Perhaps the book is even more relevant today than it was when it was first published. When reading what you are saying about the past of Romania, I wondered if you feel a kinship to Herta Muller? Very scary what happened to her protagonists in her books about Romania.
Hanneke wrote: "Great review, Adina. This book made an enormous impact on me. I read it decades ago. It is one of my most favorite books ever. Perhaps the book is even more relevant today than it was when it was f..." Thank you. It is the kind of books that stays with you forever. I did not read Herta Muller but from the reviews of other Romanian GR friends I understand she exaggerates things, she creates a bleak atmosphere, worse than it really was.
That's raw and came gushing without restraint from you, Adina! We are looking at an immensely volatile future and sleep is our first sacrifice at its altar. Powerful review.
I think Herta Muller is just very traumatised. I would be curious what you would think of her books. She writes in images that are very hard to understand, but I wonder if you would, seeing you were brought up in the same environment. I don't know if she exaggerates, her feelings feel very genuine. This is how she sees the world.
Adina I am moved by your mighty words. I love your passion and how deeply this novel moved you. Well said young lady.
Brilliant review! "Never let me go" exhausted me; I felt beaten after reading it and yet I found it to be a masterpiece. This one I think is even more terrifying.
beautiful and full of passion review Adina !...loved your feeling for this book..Atwood's writing has always fascinated me as well ...!
Wow, Adinia, you've excelled yourself. The way you've made your review echo the format of the book, without dipping into pastiche, but actually making its message more forceful. Awefull.
Bianca wrote: "That powerful, huh? Fantastic review." Thank you. Yeah, it felt powerful to me. i read it at the right time, i suppose.
Seemita wrote: "That's raw and came gushing without restraint from you, Adina! We are looking at an immensely volatile future and sleep is our first sacrifice at its altar. Powerful review." Thank you. I do not think we can allow ourselves to sleep.
Hanneke wrote: "I think Herta Muller is just very traumatised. I would be curious what you would think of her books. She writes in images that are very hard to understand, but I wonder if you would, seeing you wer..." I plan to read one of her works in the future. I was 4 when the Revolution happened so I can't say that I lived too much in Communism. Still, the reconstruction of our country took (and still does) a lot of time and the mentalities that were created at that time still affect our progress in the present.
Yes, I understand, Alina. I realise that you must have been really too young to have experienced how it was to live under Ceausescu like Herta Muller did. I once saw an interview with her and she came accross as a severely neurotic person. Well, she was allowed to emigrate to Germany before Ceausescu's fall. Still, she never got over the hardships of her youth, she said. I would be curious to see how you like her books. I was very impressed by The Fox remained the Hunter (I have to look up the title in English, I read it in Dutch).
Arah-Lynda wrote: "Adina I am moved by your mighty words. I love your passion and how deeply this novel moved you. Well said young lady." Thank you. Unfortunately, the more i read the harder I am impressed by a book. I am grateful when i find a read that has an impact on me.
Ginger wrote: "Awesome review Adina. Makes me want to read it even more!" Thank you. You should. I hope you it will find you in the right moment.
Claudia wrote: "Brilliant review! "Never let me go" exhausted me; I felt beaten after reading it and yet I found it to be a masterpiece. This one I think is even more terrifying." Yes, I felt beaten after both novels. Maybe even more so after this one. However, I stopped reading Never let Me Go for a month because of its impact.
Awesome review Adina! I can see how much this one affected you. That''s why I never read scary/crime books before bed.....can't get them out of my head. Sorry this happened to you with this one.
Great review, Adina. I felt much the same when I finished it! Although I can say I enjoyed it as well, as scary and heavy as it was. I totally know what you mean both by the inability to sleep after finishing a book like that, and not knowing what to write in a review. The better the book, the harder it is to write one, often...
Praveen wrote: "beautiful and full of passion review Adina !...loved your feeling for this book..Atwood's writing has always fascinated me as well ...!" yes, she is fascinating. I am definitely going to read more of her. Just not right now.
Cecily wrote: "Wow, Adinia, you've excelled yourself. The way you've made your review echo the format of the book, without dipping into pastiche, but actually making its message more forceful. Awefull." Thank you. I guess insomnia encourages creativity. :))
Alex ☣ Deranged KittyCat ☣ wrote: "This is a sad, amazing review. I feel the exact same way. :(" it is not a happy book.
Hanneke wrote: "Yes, I understand, Alina. I realise that you must have been really too young to have experienced how it was to live under Ceausescu like Herta Muller did. I once saw an interview with her and she c..." I think Romanian grew a specific sense of humor to better deal with that period and her work lack any proof of it. Everything is too bleak for her. I talk from reviews so it is not my interpretation of her work. i will rad for myself and come back with an opinion.
PorshaJo wrote: "Awesome review Adina! I can see how much this one affected you. That''s why I never read scary/crime books before bed.....can't get them out of my head. Sorry this happened to you with this one." I wasn't expecting it to impact my sleep that much.I was thinking of the characters, the books's message. Then i got the idea for the review and I was worried that in the morning I will loose my thread (it usually happens) so I decided to write it then and there so I can go to sleep. It worked.
Evelina | AvalinahsBooks wrote: "Great review, Adina. I felt much the same when I finished it! Although I can say I enjoyed it as well, as scary and heavy as it was. I totally know what you mean both by the inability to sleep afte..." I agree it is hard to write a review for a book you love but at least you want to write something. i struggle with books that I have nothing to say about, like the one I am reading right now. I would have probably enjoyed it better if I had been in a dystopia mood. Which I wasn't. I started the novel because I wanted to see the TV series and because everyone was talking about it. I do not regret that i read it, obviously.
Beautiful and personal, Adina. Scary but your review still pulls me towards reading the book in a strange way.
Great review. I listened to the audible book by Claire Danes. It was excellently done. This books stays with you forever. I won't be watching the series. I saw the trailer and it sickened me. Adding the visuals made it even worse. I don't regret reading it; the book is outstanding. Like you, I will read her again, but need some to pass.










