Review of Atwood's Hag-Seed

Hag-Seed Hag-Seed by Margaret Atwood

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


Another day, another Atwood. I just began reading her work (beginning with the excellent Moral Disorder), and I'm glad I have! Her wit, clarity, and complexity are all very stimulating.

This is a part of the Hogarth Shakespeare, meaning that invited authors do their own takes of assigned plays. Atwood faces off with The Tempest. I really like her idea of doing this by telling the story of how a fallen theatre director and his production of the play with convicts in a prison. It allows for both an effective frame that mirrors the themes and plot of the play itself, and to have an ongoing discussion between the characters about all the small and large problems of the play and how to stage it. Throughout, there are elegant but non-obvious references to play's production history and the many debates surrounding its reception, all of which are admirably up-to-date. And the theatre production frame opens for all the little questions of the practical aspects of performing Shakespeare, something I think is all too missing in many discussions of his plays - after all, they really are PLAYS!

It is also refreshing to see how Atwood does not engage too much with the many postcolonial readings of Caliban that now are so influential. That is not to say that I have anything against them - on the contrary, they are essential to how I read the play myself - but it is still intriguing with a take which gives room to many of the play's other aspects.

As with many other similar books (and films!) that follow classical originals, some parts of the plot here appear a bit too contrived, and the resolution itself is a bit rushed. Also, it is very hard, even for a writer like Atwood, to keep readers from playing 'spot the original plot' while reading. That being said, the most of the characters of this book do take on lives of their own, lives that brush with The Tempest and then continue along their own trajectories.

All in all, it's a wonderful read.



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Published on February 10, 2017 01:09
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Blog from the World of All

Jon Erebus
The World of All is the setting of a new series of fantasy stories. The first cycle, Koholt Chronicles, are being published throughout the summer of 2015.

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