Oryx-and-crake

Margaret Atwood, Campbell Scott

Overview

<p><p><b>with The Same Stunning Blend Of Prophecy And Social Satire She Brought To Her Classic The Handmaid's Tale, Margaret Atwood Gives Us A Keenly Prescient Novel About The Future Of Humanity&#8212;and Its Present.</b><p> Humanity Here Equals Snowman, And In Snowman's Recollections Atwood Re-creates A Time Much Like Our Own, When A Boy Named Jimmy Loved An Elusive, Damaged Girl Called Oryx And A Sardonic Genius Called Crake. But Now Snowman Is Alone, And As We Learn Why We Also Learn About A World That Could Become Ours One Day.</p><h3>the New York Times</h3><p>this Is The Intention Of The Novel: To Goad Us To Thought By Making Us Screen In The Mind A Powerful Vision Of Competence Run Amok. What Atwood Could Not Have Intended, And What Is No Less Alarming And Exponentially More Urgent, Is The Resonance Between Her Rampaging Plague Scenario And The Recent Global Outbreak Of Sars. Moving From Book To Newspaper, Or Newspaper To Book, The Reader Realizes, With A Jolt, How The Threshold Of Difference Has Been Lowered In Recent Months. The Force Of Atwood's Imagining Grows In Direct Proportion To Our Rising Anxiety Level. And So Does The Importance Of Her Implicit Caution. &mdash; <i>sven Birkerts</i></p>

Details
Books On Tape, Inc.
9780739304082
MP3 Book
2007
EN
pages
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