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The Testaments (The Handmaid's Tale, #2)
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2020 TOB Shortlist Books > The Testaments

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message 1: by Amy (new) - rated it 4 stars

Amy (asawatzky) | 1743 comments thread to discuss The Testaments by Margaret Atwood and whether this book would have been included if she had published pre-2016 election

(I personally was hoping to leave Handmaid's Tale as is and NOT read this one despite many friends encouraging me to do so)


Jenny (Reading Envy) (readingenvy) | 642 comments Well I'm super bummed this one is on the list, honestly. I do not think it warrants the attention, certainly not the Booker. I discussed it twice on my podcast - once before it won the Booker and once afterwards (I think I am better able to articulate the specificity of my disappointment the second time.)

I think THIS was the book everyone read on the subway. This does not equate with a quality book.

If you don't want to read my issues with the book, I'll put them behind a click. (view spoiler)


Karissa | 32 comments I'm actually pretty happy The Testaments made it on the list ONLY if it gets to go head-to-head with GWO. (Assuming that GWO would win).

The book was definitely written for fans of the TV show rather than fans of the book. I guess good for Atwood for capitalizing on this new fan base she has.

It was still an enjoyable page-turning read so I don't think that should stop anyone from reading it. Just don't expect it to be written in the same literary style as the first book.


message 4: by [deleted user] (new)

I read it when it came out and enjoyed it. It was a good page turner, but it shouldn't win the TOB. It's merely a well-crafted revisit of a classic.

Having said that, people always tag Atwood with the "literature" label, but in doing so often forget that she creates damn suspenseful stories.


message 5: by Amy (new) - rated it 4 stars

Amy (asawatzky) | 1743 comments Jenny (Reading Envy) wrote: "Well I'm super bummed this one is on the list, honestly. I do not think it warrants the attention, certainly not the Booker..."

I was really hoping to pretend this book was never written, and leave The Handmaid's Tale on the prescient pedestal it deserves (along with the status of 'only Atwood Amy has ever liked) ... something along the lines of what my brain has done with Harper Lee's unmentionable recent release. I'm attempting to be a completist this year though, so I'll realign my expectations to 'this should be entertaining,'

Too bad this couldn't have replaced one of the play-in books as it seems to fit the bill (except there's no way it's a 3rd seed as most play-ins are).


Gwendolyn | 306 comments I agree with everything here. The Testaments was a page-turning suspenseful read that didn’t add anything interesting or novel over the original book (Handmaid’s Tale). No reason it should be on this list except that it is difficult to avoid putting a Booker winner on the list. I think there’s an unspoken rule about that. At least we have Girl, Woman, Other also on the list. What a fantastic book that was!


Lisa (lisanelsen) | 88 comments I adore Atwood and have a love/hate relationship with the Hulu Series. (My favorite Atwood is the MaddAddam trilogy.)

As a fan, I had a great time reading The Testaments but was surprised that it won the Booker and earned a spot on the TOB.


Monica | 17 comments I loved this book, but I agree that it might not be TOB worthy.


Beth | 204 comments I am a big Atwood fan, but this doesn't seem up to her normal standards. I reread The Handmaids Tale right before starting The Testaments, and I think that only served to highlight the difference in quality of the story telling. So many of Atwood's books have been favorite reads, that this seemed extra disappointing. I would have preferred a book that was told solely from Lydia's viewpoint.


Heidi (heidikatherine) | 92 comments Like some others here, I was really hoping to avoid this book. I like Atwood’s writing for the most part, and this was no exception, but reading it confirmed for me that its goal was mercenary. Nothing about it felt new or exciting or important. At least it read pretty fast. Honestly still shocked at all the accolades; doesn’t even begin to measure up to Girl, Woman, Other in my mind.


Gwendolyn | 306 comments As we get closer to the TOB, I think the lack of commentary here on this book is notable, especially because it’s probably the book on the shortlist that most people have read. Seems to suggest a “meh” opinion all around.


message 12: by C (new) - rated it 4 stars

C | 799 comments I think if The Handmaid's Tale didn't exist, and The Testaments was really book #1 and an original concept, I think the Testaments would have been received much better. The Testaments is so matter-of-fact (though that might be the point, like testifying in a court would be matter-of-fact) but it's so different from Offred's voice, it's like two different writers wrote these books.


message 13: by Amy (new) - rated it 4 stars

Amy (asawatzky) | 1743 comments I liked that Handmaid’s Tale dumped you into the world with just hints of how we got there (which seemed both plausible and also extreme) —- but the world changed since then and it feels like Testaments is the answer to “hey, you guys didn’t take the hint not to do this!” by showing all the steps (big and small) along the way. To be honest, it felt more prescient in Handmaid’s Tale while giving us the details in Testaments makes it too easy to dismiss it as “can’t happen here” by picking apart any extreme scene (arresting a mother-via-sperm-donor to get forced into Handmaidenhood e.g.)

It is compulsive though!


message 14: by C (new) - rated it 4 stars

C | 799 comments Amy wrote: "I liked that Handmaid’s Tale dumped you into the world with just hints of how we got there (which seemed both plausible and also extreme) —- but the world changed since then and it feels like Testa..."

Very true, Amy.


message 15: by Lauren (last edited Feb 19, 2020 01:24PM) (new) - rated it 3 stars

Lauren Oertel | 1401 comments I just finished this last night. I wanted to read the print version since I didn't have a positive experience listening to the audio version of Handmaid's Tale. I'll go back and read that one in print sometime though.

I agree with the comments above. This was a page-turning story, but not much else. I thought the ending section was especially disappointing. It felt like a cheap way to wrap it all up, and another format could have created a more moving conclusion.

I marked various points in the book as I read though. I liked the comparison of executions and marriage, and these lines, "Keep your friends close but your enemies closer. Having no friends, I must make do with enemies," (speaking of cockroaches crawling over her face) "I did not slap them. After a while you welcome any kind of touch," and "Torture is like dancing: I'm too old for it. Let the younger ones practice their bravery."

I also marked some strange things though. I'm surprised the author used terms like "street people," "gypsy," and the line, "A tooth missing like that makes a person look illegal." I wondered if this language was intentional or if she's out of touch with what people are (and are NOT) saying these days...

This was reasonably entertaining but not high quality literature for me. I agree that it probably shouldn't have won the Booker or made the ToB shortlist, but hopefully the judges can pull a lively discussion out of us.


message 16: by Brenda (new) - added it

Brenda Baker | 36 comments Testaments was entertaining but I'd rather read the novel about how Gilead came to be rather than its demise. I feel like we are living that novel...


Aaron Marsh | 49 comments Good Lord I’m finding this an indulgent mess. It feels every bit the longest book in the tournament to me. Such a shame, since the original (just reread) still has that breathless, golden quality.

(I also balked at the “illegal” person line. Talk about tone deaf! Whew...)


Peggy | 256 comments Huh. I really liked this book and am fine with it being in the ToB (even though my beloved Disappearing Earth is not). I found it to be the page-turner that everyone else did but I also found it to be literary (though that term is pretty nebulous).

And whomever said they wanted simply Aunt Lydia's narrative, yeah, I'd be down with that. She was definitely the most interesting character. I'm psyched to read the judgement tomorrow.


Peebee | 68 comments It will motivate me to reread The Handmaid’s Tale, but I enjoyed it for its standalone value. It will be interesting to see what the judge does with it though, as despite the Booker co-win, it doesn’t have the same literary feel as most ToB contestants.


Lauren Oertel | 1401 comments Lee wrote: "I read the Handmaids tale when it was first published, I was a young woman and I thought it was amazing! I read it again 3 years ago and it frightened me. I haven't watched the TV program as I didn..."

One of my book clubs read The Natural Way of Things a few years ago and we thought it was excellent! I still remember it very vividly.


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