Having finished The Antares Maelstrom, I'm now reading Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale.
Lately, I had observed that certain politicians (Mitch McConnell comes to mind) are the sort of people "who could read The Handmaid's Tale cover-to-cover, without ever realizing that it's dystopian," and so I figured I ought to read the damn thing myself. (I do, after all, have a probably-annoying habit of alluding to movies I've never seen, e.g., Fight Club, and the whole Alien franchise.)
Dystopian fiction is not normally my thing, and so, while I'd read enough about The Handmaid's Tale (and its various dramatic adaptations) to know what it's about, I'd never actually read it, nor seen any of the adaptations.
Lately, I had observed that certain politicians (Mitch McConnell comes to mind) are the sort of people "who could read The Handmaid's Tale cover-to-cover, without ever realizing that it's dystopian," and so I figured I ought to read the damn thing myself. (I do, after all, have a probably-annoying habit of alluding to movies I've never seen, e.g., Fight Club, and the whole Alien franchise.)
Dystopian fiction is not normally my thing, and so, while I'd read enough about The Handmaid's Tale (and its various dramatic adaptations) to know what it's about, I'd never actually read it, nor seen any of the adaptations.