IN old kids in the woods Margaret Atwood presents her signature science fiction with a human heart. This is a collection of stories full of playfulness and ingenuity, from the sudden ascension of a snail’s soul into the body of a young customer service representative in Metempsychosis., in a posthumous conversation with George Orwell in The Dead Interview.
The book marks Atwood’s first return to fiction since 2019. wills, its continuation Maid Story co-winner of the Booker Prize with Bernardine Evaristogirl, woman, different.
It reminds us of her short form skills and helps with the seemingly realistic history of the longtime couple. We meet Teague and Nell in the first part and again in the third and final part, which explores Nell’s pain after Teague’s death: “No stars, not for you, never, she mourns. And on your next breath: don’t be so damn sentimental.” The book is dedicated to Atwood’s partner Graham Gibson, who passed away in 2019, and it’s this last section that seems to be the most poignant and emotionally fluid, with a wonderful grasp of the feelings – the ones we want and the ones that insist we had instead. . this.
Between these sections is a diverse, pleasantly eclectic collection of stories. Fantasy offers a convenient way to approach slightly raw subjects, and Atwood capitalizes on this. Freeforall, for example, is based on our recent experience of contagion and quarantine: the action takes place in a world where a virulent sexually transmitted disease has made any physical contact dangerous to life or death.
Airborne, on the other hand, brings nuance and empathy to culture wars. A committee of “old feminists” gathered here to write a proposal together, but one of them ran into a new generation of activists. “We are experiencing regime change like Revvie in France. Waking up one morning using yesterday’s password, getting rid of my head,” committee member Leoni says, but she is softened by colleague Myrna, who reminds her of her own longtime zeal: “We protected several Old Mists. [ourselves]Anyway”.
Like Leoni and Mirna, most of them old favoritesThe heroes enter their last years. Aging is usually presented as a blessing. “Do you remember what it’s like to be young?” Leoni thinks. “Sometimes it was fun. Although I don’t miss PMS,” says her friend Chrissy. But he carries with him an inevitable departure from the zeitgeist, as well as his vocabulary. As Nell writes to a friend: “Young people have always been called what they call now but not old people. We notice gaps, gaps.”
Such cracks are a recurring theme throughout. old favoritesbut as the narrator of Eager Griselda, a story about an alien tasked with retelling human tales, tells us, “storytelling helps us understand each other despite our social, historical, and evolutionary differences, doesn’t it?”
Atwood seems to do just that. At the end of the book, a grieving Nell finds Teague’s note about the use of bed nets: “She’s taking this piece of paper to town, but what is she going to do with it there?” What are you even doing with these cryptic messages from the dead? Through time and space, species and generations, Atwood’s characters reach out to each other in the name of erasing distances, both physical and emotional – even those that seem the most insurmountable.