Saturday, October 5, 2013

Book Review: Martaget Atwood's "Maddaddam"



          In Maddaddam, Margaret Atwood masterfully concludes her post-apocalyptic trilogy that began with Oryx and Crake.
          The book follows a group of survivors from the bioengineered disease that decimated the human population, as they contend with other humans, other species—some natural and some engineered—and the elements, adjusting to a life without the technologies that had made their pre-disease world so much easier to navigate. Luckily, many of the survivors were once members of the Gods Gardeners, a group that was eventually disbanded by the government, but that once promoted clean living, recycling, and harmony with nature in the pre-apocalyptic world. The Gardeners had learned how to cultivate land, survive in the wilderness, and, more importantly, they avoided the products being created and peddled by the Corps (large, often corrupt, corporate conglomerates that had sold anything from healthcare products to bioengineered food products), which had saved them from ingesting the carefully planted and disseminated pills that had carried the cataclysmic disease.
          Joining them are the Crakers, semi-human species that were bioengineered by the disease’s creator to replace the human species after his disease had wiped it out. The Crakers are engineered to lead a simple life: they can only subsist on a plant based diet; they are devoid of any propensity for violence; and all tendencies of jealousy have been removed from them, as has the desire to create a culture. Anything that their creator, Crake, thought had led to human conflict and the disfigurement of the planet by humans has been stamped out the Crakers genetically.
          Crake, however, could not stamp out everything, though he may have thought his creation was perfect. The Crakers do possess some society-building tendencies and they are a highly curious species. The Crakers take to writing and storytelling. Undoubtedly, Atwood intended her portrayal of the Crakers, their slow development, their acute culture-building tendencies, and their need for a god and mythology, to represent a vision of humanities own development. Perhaps, in tens of thousands of years, the Crakers, will have created nations and begun to carryout experiments similar to those the human species had conducted, experiments that had slowly destroyed the earth. But, in asserting this last, I am overstepping the boundaries of Atwood’s work.
          The book, and the series as a whole encourages reflection. It makes its readers think about their own responsibilities, and it forces them to see that everything has consequences, many of which are largely unforeseeable. No creation is perfect.
          As a story, the novel is intriguing and enticing. Characters introduced in the other two books of the series are given greater prominence here, and their backstories are slowly flushed out, though not completely. There are many questions that are left unanswered; Atwood intends to leave these questions unanswered. The only downside to the narrative is its ending. I found myself intrigued for the whole book, but when the ending came, it was not what I expected. While the ending was neither bad, nor was it unfitting to the book or Atwood’s project as a whole in the series, it was simply a little bit of a letdown. Nonetheless, I recommend the series highly. Start with Oryx and Crake, then read The Year of the Flood, before starting on Maddaddam.
          As a side note to all of this. I realize that in my last post I had said I would be reading the Mighty Walzer by Howard Jacobson next. I did begin reading the novel, but found it both appalling and boring. It’s not worth picking up, and certainly not worth reading. I chose to abandon that novel in pursuit of other interests.

JCM
2 October 2013

No comments:

Post a Comment