The Year of the Flood - Margaret Atwood
Toby survived the waterless flood partially because she’d prepared for such an eventuality – building a hidden store of provisions and medicinal herbs – and partially because the schoolmarmish, fifty-something herbalist had the good luck to be living in a secure high-end health spa. Ren survived by accident: when the plague hit, she’d been quarantined after possible contamination by one of her “clients” at the high-end sex club where she worked a trapeze act. This is their story…
Toby and Ren have shared history, believe it or not. They’d spent several years together as members of God’s Gardeners, a sect that seems to have been created by mating the Amish with PETA – the central tenets of the faith are to avoid the use of modern conveniences and to never eat anything with a face or a mother. The Gardeners celebrate a different saint each day, saints like Dian Fossey, Euell Gibbons, and Terry Fox; and live simple lives amid beehives and rooftop gardens. All the while, “modern civilization” swirls around their little colony – a dystopian hell in which gargantuan corporations have taken over even the last vestiges of government, and therefore may comport themselves pretty much as they please. When the only police or military agency on the planet is CorpSeCorps – the corporate security corps – the question of “who’s minding the minders” pretty much becomes moot. Meanwhile, the Corporations sequester their scientists and technicians in secure compounds where they gleefully develop “new and improved” product after “newer and more improved” product to peddle to the rest of humanity, those called the “plebes.” Filled with the bored, the uneducated, and the chronically unemployed; the plebelands are a sea of hedonism and violence upon which the scattered islands of the compounds float uneasily. The billions of plebes subsist on a diet of SecretBurgers (the secret is where the meat comes from), get their health care from HelthWyzer, get their rocks off at Scales & Tails (Ren’s employer, a division of SecksCorp), and the women dream of a spa weekend at ANooYoo (where Toby’s a manager). Obviously, the txtg gnrshn named the businesses.
And then one day the world changed: a particularly pesky new bug got loose and the corporations couldn’t manage to get it under control. And when the dust cleared, the only survivors were the few who’d been isolated when the plague struck – a surprising number of them Gardeners… The Year of the Flood tells the same story as many another post-apocalyptic novel: a small band of survivors struggles to find food and shelter, and fights off the criminals who flourish with the disappearance of social order. Where Atwood’s saga differs is in the construction of her plot: instead of a sharp break when “the flood” occurs, Atwood’s content to let her story wander back and forth across that line in flashbacks of varying lengths – mostly how Ren and Toby got to this point; less of how the planet got in such a state. As in her seminal novel The Handmaid’s Tale, Atwood spends little effort on answering procedural questions – the “how” and the “why” are explained in just a few toss-off sentences. She is instead content to let her audience read between the lines of a 400-plus page social commentary – which makes it no less biting, when all is said and done. |
The “universe” of The Year of the Flood is the same as that of Oryx and Crake, right down to the appearance of a handful of characters in both tales – The Snowman, narrator of Oryx and Crake, shows up as a teenaged Jimmy; Crake slips into the plot several times as Glenn; and Oryx even shows up once – as do the Crakers, the post-modern humanoids Crake designed and gave to Oryx to “train.” Though they share the same universe, however, with its manmade piggoons, rakunks, liobams, multicolored Mo’Hairs, and phosphorescent lumiroses; The Year of the Flood stands resolutely alone.
A superb example of Margaret Atwood’s renowned ability to spin a tale that both entertains and enlightens, The Year of the Flood is one of those rare books that can take its reader through the full range of emotions. By turns dryly witty, terrifying, thought-provoking, and heart-warming; Atwood’s latest is one you simply shouldn’t miss. As you're reading, you can hear that whimper...
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