2006-07-04

2006-07-04 10:35 am
Entry tags:

Who brought the cat?

I finished reading Oryx and Crake by Margaret Atwood. I liked this quite a bit. Atwood seems to be a good author for people who like science fiction but want to wander into the Reputable Authors section of the bookstore/library; the three books of hers I've read all have some sort of SF component. (Of the other two, The Handmaid's Tale is an alternate-future story; I thought The Blind Assassin was just depressing the whole way through, but there's an SF-ish story woven through it.)

Oryx and Crake is an alternate-future story about what happens if the pharmaceutical/bioengineering companies get out of control. The world has ended, approximately, and there's one Real Human left, who has figured out how to live without the comforts of the now-ruined civilization and fend off the newly created wildlife. A lot of the story is spent in flashbacks, but this basically means that there are three plotlines, all of which do succeed in moving forward. Crake is the protagonist's boy-genius childhood friend, who gets into both computer and biological hacking; Oryx is a girl who appears first in adolescent-viewed porn.

The world is believable and well-developed, though, and the story is entertaining for being post-apocalyptic. Atwood does seem to be good at verbal humor, and so I will leave you with the following:

The prospect of his future life stretched before him like a sentence; not a prison sentence, but a long-winded sentence with a lot of unnecessary subordinate clauses, as he was soon in the habit of quipping during Happy Hour pickup time at the local campus bars and pubs.