Title: Moral Disorder
Author: Margaret Atwood
Publisher: Bloomsbury
Rating: 2/5
Synopsis (from blurb on book cover):
Margaret Atwood has frequently been cited as one of the foremost writers of our time. Moral Disorder, her new work of fiction, could be seen as a collection of eleven stories that is almost a novel or a novel broken up into eleven stories. It resembles a photograph album - a series of clearly observed moments that trace the course of a life, and the lives intertwined with it - those of parents, siblings, children, friends, enemies, teachers and even animals. And as in a photograph album, times change; every decade is here, from the 1930s through the 50s, 60s and 70s to the present day. The settings are equally varied: large cities, suburbs, farms, northern forests.
Review:
This book was an oddity for me. I hadn't read the synopsis in the book jacket, and had no idea what the book was about, so at first it seemed like a series of disjointed short stories, all told from the female perspective, but after the sixth story/chapter, things started falling into place. I realised that the first chapter was the main character in old age, then from the second chapter onwards, we were seeing a snapshot of a different time or event in her life, moving onwards to understand how she became the person she was back in the first story.
Although there is a narrative running through the stories, my feeling was that they were really about how we perceive, judge and rationalise people and events within our own minds, giving a very introverted take on the life of an individual. Once I was able to embrace this concept (at chapter six), I could better appreciate the book, and I actually went back and skim read the first five chapters again before finishing it.
Having said that, the first chapter is still a bit of an enigma to me; is this supposed to be an alternate world or society? I still don't understand the relevance of the political references in the first chapter and how it fits in with the rest of the stories, which all seem to be much more "normal" and in line with our own society.
I'm still not sure if I enjoyed the book, although once I understood what was going on, I did feel more encouraged to continue with it. It did make me think about the difference between what we think in our own minds and how we express and portray ourselves to others, and that made it an interesting and thought provoking read.