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The Handmaid's Tale has ruined me...

39 replies

IsItMeOr · 05/06/2015 15:59

I didn't read it until a couple of years ago, and I loved it. I also read and loved Alias Grace, but found it hard to get into another one of hers I tried (Blind Assassin possibly?).

I also loved Never Let Me Go.

Are there other books that I can read which won't sorely disappoint?

OP posts:
storminabuttercup · 05/06/2015 16:30

I couldn't get into the blind assassin but loved alias grace. Haven't read any others apart from handmaids tale. Not helpful I know :-D

littlejessie · 05/06/2015 16:32

Try Geek Love (Katherine Dunn) OP. You need a strong stomach in places, but it's an extraordinary book. I prefer it to The Handmaid's Tale actually.

HeartsTrumpDiamonds · 05/06/2015 16:33

You could try some Alice Munro too. I loved Runaway.

PotatoesNotProzac · 05/06/2015 16:35

Poisonwood bible by Barbara kingsolver.

And maybe some marge piercy? Women on the edge of time?

1wokeuplikethis · 05/06/2015 16:35

I read handmaids tale for GCSEs but ten years (ahem!) later I've just really thoroughly enjoyed reading the oryx & crake trilogy. Try the first one and you'll soon know if it's your cup of tea but I would highly recommend them.

Actually, I'm going to read handmaids tale again now. Thanks!

PotatoesNotProzac · 05/06/2015 16:36

Or he, she, it by marge piercy

Takver · 05/06/2015 16:37

I loved the Handmaid's Tale, but not so inspired by her other novels other than The Edible Woman (I actively disliked Oryx & Crake plus sequels). I also loved Never Let Me Go

Other books I like in the same vein:
The Dispossessed by Ursula Le Guin (I'd 100% recommend this - her novel The Left Hand of Darkness is also excellent)
Native Tongue by Suzette Haden Elgin

Woman on the Edge of Time by Marge Piercy is a classic, maybe a bit dated but still well worth reading.

Takver · 05/06/2015 16:37

X-post with Potatoes, and yy to Poisonwood bible

NorahDentressangle · 05/06/2015 16:39

I enjoyed Cat's Eye by her.

SolidGoldBrass · 05/06/2015 16:43

Another recommendation for Native Tongue (and its sequel, The Judas Rose). They are odd books but they really stay with you - they were written partly as a linguistic experiment (the author is a professor of linguistics or something).

I also love Gwyneth Jones' Bold As Love series (five books altogether: Bold As Love, Castles Made Of Sand, Midnight Lamp, Band of Gypsies, Rainbow Bridge). Again, not to everyone's taste but the ideas in them are a bit fascinating.

PotatoesNotProzac · 05/06/2015 16:57

Can't believe 2 recommendations for native tongue! I thought I was the only person who'd ever read it :)

Yy to the disposed.

And I loved tigana by guy gavriel Kay.

Anyone remember a book about a society where men and women live seperately. And it's about an illegal love affair between a man and a women?

JulyKit · 05/06/2015 17:04

I also was really taken with Cat's Eye, and I thought Surfacing was brilliant, too. That was a long time ago, not sure I'd enjoy them so much now. Oh, and The Robber Bride.

Also, have you read anything by Joyce Carol Oates? Her books are really varied (and variable). The one I've liked most so far is American Appetites, which I thought was awesome.

I agree re. Rhona Munro. Her short stories are really satisfying. Love them.

Takver · 05/06/2015 17:04

Potatoes - are you thinking of Walk to the End of the World / Motherlines by Suzy McKee Charnas? Didn't recommend it as the OP didn't request books to plunge her into extreme depression Grin Though in fact this thread just sent me back to the SFMistressWorks blog, and I see there are two further sequels published at the end of the 90s, which sound a little more optimistic in tone.

Another possible for you, OP, and a bit more modern - The Carhullan Army didn't quite do it for me, but I know a lot of people who really rate it.

KatharineClifton · 05/06/2015 17:09

Carol Shields, Alice Hoffman, Anne Tyler. Not a disappointing one there.

PeterParkerSays · 05/06/2015 17:13

I loved Vikram Seth's An Equal Music if you've never read that.

If you know London it mentions places, and makes you think "oh, yes, I know where that is", but it's not essential to the plot if you don't.

DoItTooJulia · 05/06/2015 17:13

Love anything by Kingslover, including the Poisonwood bible, but really enjoyed Prodigal Summer. Would really recommend that one actually.

What about Brave New World, Aldous Huxley and staying with the theme, 1984?

I liked Oryx and Crake, but really liked the Year of The Flood. I've got Maddadam and I'm waiting to get stuck into it!

ChazzerChaser · 05/06/2015 17:16

The carhullan army

Glittermud · 05/06/2015 17:20

Rose Tremain 'music and silence'

CosmicDespot · 05/06/2015 17:21

The Yellow Wallpaper is tiny, but brill. I really enjoyed The Master and Marguerita, which is not tiny, but also brill. I have had The Red Tent highly recommended to me recently, but haven't looked it up.

nannyplumislostinspace · 05/06/2015 17:34

I also loved cats eye and the robber bride! Read them as a teenager and they became favourites.

IsItMeOr · 05/06/2015 17:40

Oh wow, thanks for all the responses. Flowers

I have a feeling I tried starting Poisonwood Bible and found it a bit annoying. Is that the one where the family from the US go to Africa to "save" the locals, written from the perspective of one of the daughters?

I think I will give Ursula le Guin a try first, and then work my way through the other recommendations.

OP posts:
KatharineClifton · 05/06/2015 17:43

The Red Tent is brilliant Cosmic and all her others.

Adds Anita Diamant to list :)

OttiliaVonBCup · 05/06/2015 17:44

Burial Rites would be a good one.

PotatoesNotProzac · 05/06/2015 18:11

Red tent is brilliant.

What about beauty by sheri teper.

KatharineClifton · 05/06/2015 18:13

And Kate Grenville. The Idea of Perfection is exquisite.