dwhatson reviewed Oryx and Crake by Margaret Atwood
A Future Both Wonderous and Terrifying
5 stars
This book sat around in my bookshelf for a couple of years before I finally read it. Wow! Margaret Atwood manages to pack so much into one book. She questions everything from defining human, the use of technology, money and morals, an end-of-the-world scenario and morality in general. And that’s just the start of it!
Atwood explores all of this through three characters. Jimmy/Snowman is your average slacker. He’s someone who could have done better with their life but somehow never quite got there. Then there’s his best friend and counterpart, the brilliant Crake. Crake is no doubt a genius but, is that an excuse for what seems to be a lack of morals? Finally, there’s Oryx; loved by both of them and quite possibly the only one with any knowledge about the true nature of love.
In non-linear fashion, we jump-cut our way through their personal histories to watch …
This book sat around in my bookshelf for a couple of years before I finally read it. Wow! Margaret Atwood manages to pack so much into one book. She questions everything from defining human, the use of technology, money and morals, an end-of-the-world scenario and morality in general. And that’s just the start of it!
Atwood explores all of this through three characters. Jimmy/Snowman is your average slacker. He’s someone who could have done better with their life but somehow never quite got there. Then there’s his best friend and counterpart, the brilliant Crake. Crake is no doubt a genius but, is that an excuse for what seems to be a lack of morals? Finally, there’s Oryx; loved by both of them and quite possibly the only one with any knowledge about the true nature of love.
In non-linear fashion, we jump-cut our way through their personal histories to watch the tapestry of doom become increasingly sullied by humanity’s social, scientific and environmental atrocities until the fabric rips as a solution is found. One of this book’s strengths is the extrapolation of current human activity to partially form the plot, another is the level of research Atwood must have done in order make some of the ideas plausible and darkly humorous.
‘Oh Snowman, tell us a story’. Well, Margret Atwood did and I loved every bit of it.