To
give you some context, the only other Atwood book I've read so far is
The Handmaid's
Tale,
which was very smart and very creepy. I plan to read her Maddaddam
trilogy soon.
As
in The Handmaid's
Tale,
the narrative voice in Stone
Mattress is,
at times, confident,
witty, and
cutting.
Which I loved.
Of the nine tales, several stood out because of their unusual subject
matter, by which I mean, issues that I personally haven't come across
often in works of literary fiction: the problems and complications
associated with aging, writers' relationships with zealous fans, and
the conflict between a novel/poem and academic interpretations.
All
of these issues surface in the first three stories of the
collection--"Alphinland," "Revenant," and "Dark
Lady"--which together explore the regrets and desires of now
elderly writers and artists who were once closely connected. In each
tale, Atwood brings up the issues of literary legacy, interpretation,
and fandom. As Gavin (the poet) toys with a grad student who has come
to gush over his work, he finds out that his first love, Constance,
is now considered a major voice in fantasy fiction (he never took her
seriously). Throw into the mix Gavin's current wife, and Jorie (one
of his former girlfriends), and you have interconnected stories about
the disconnect between physical and emotional age. Each of these
characters remembers things that happened in the '60s as if they
happened yesterday, and they look back both fondly and ironically on
their early literary pursuits. They've aged, and they're tired and
worn-down, but cling tenaciously to their current world.
In
this same vein, Atwood gives us "Torching the Dusties," the
last story, in which an upscale retirement home is attacked by
younger people resentful of the elderly. Their movement, "Our
Time," aims to eliminate the elderly, and thus their consumption
of food and medical resources. It's chilling and reminiscent of the
brutality and single-mindedness depicted in The
Handmaid's Tale.
"The Dead Hand Loves You" and "Stone Mattress,"
too, evoke the frustration mixed with new-found confidence that stalk
the main characters, holding onto old grudges and seeking vengeance
for past wrongs.
Atwood's send-up of academia in "Revenant" and "The
Dead Hand Loves You" particularly caught my attention, being an
ex-academic myself. Her snarky descriptions of how some literary
critics take a writer's words and then warp and twist them into
unrecognizable shapes squares with my own misgivings about the
lengths to which we take interpretation. Critical analysis is, of
course, an important tool in understanding any kind of discourse, but
even that can be taken to extremes. Only Atwood (in my reading
experience) has raised this issue in fiction.
The
stories of Stone
Mattress
were strange, unexpected, and fantastic. Highly recommended. But
then, of course- it's Margaret Atwood.
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