timeeurope.com

TIME Europe Home
  Europe
  Middle East
  Africa
  World
  Digital Europe
  Business
  Travel & Arts
  Photo Essays
  TIME Trails
  Magazine
  Archive
  Fast Forward

Special Features
  Fast Forward
  Forecast 2001
  E-Europe
Search TIME Europe
 
Subscribe to TIME
Subscriber Services
About Us

TIME Daily
TIME Asia
TIME Canada
TIME Pacific
TIME Digital
Latest CNN News

FREE NEWSLETTER!
Sign up now for TIME's WorldWatch email newsletter.
[ preview ]

 


Other News
spacer gif
spacer gif
Check the New 2000
FORTUNE 500 Today!

FORTUNE.com

spacer gif
Sivy On Stocks,
By E-Mail

MONEY.com

spacer gif
The 'X-Men' Cometh
And EW's Got 'Em!

ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY

spacer gif



TIME EUROPE
November 27, 2000, Vol. 156 No. 22


Wayward Sisters
This year's Booker Prize winner is an intricate mystery that elucidates a nation's recent history
By JAMES LOADER London

"Ten days after the war ended, my sister Laura drove a car off a bridge." The first sentence of Canadian writer Margaret Atwood's Booker Prize-winning novel, 'The Blind Assassin', (Bloomsbury; 521 pages) plunges the reader into a mystery — was it suicide? an accident? a murder? — that takes the rest of the book to resolve. The extended journey toward enlightenment leads, via the memories of a woman on the threshold of death and in a variety of narrative techniques, through the history of Canada in the 20th century.

Having been shortlisted four times already for the Booker Prize, Atwood reacts to her success this year with characteristic wry humor. "Think of all the practice gone to waste. The congratulatory handshake, the brave smile ... Who was better equipped not to win it?" The prize-winning novel takes the form of a memoir written by 82-year-old Iris Chase, with some interspersed contemporary news reports, and follows the decline of a Canadian bourgeois family from the glory days of the 19th century through the post-World War I depression that wrecks its business. More intimately, the book focuses on the relationship between two sisters as the aging Iris attempts to come to terms with Laura's death and her own involvement in it.

A third narrative strand is a clever pastiche of a novella, published in Laura's name after her death, which describes a clandestine affair between a wealthy young woman and her lover, a radical on the run for unspecified crimes. Much of the action of this novella consists of the man, a writer of science fiction, improvising a fantasy in the style of the Weird Tales sci-fi magazines of the '30s. His tale concerns the city of Sakiel-Norn — a long-dead civilization on a distant planet — a cruel and sophisticated society renowned for the skill of its child carpet weavers. Blinded by the constant close work, they find that one of the few trades left open to them is that of assassin. Other abused children in Sakiel-Norn include chosen virgins whose tongues are cut out before one of them is ritualistically raped and sacrificed for the good of the city.

Bizarre though this story within a story within a story may seem, it reflects on the real world — science fiction is often used to provide oblique social criticism, especially under repressive regimes. Thus, chapters about the sacrificial, tongueless virgin and her relationship with the blind assassin who plans to kill her are interspersed with passages of Iris' memoirs of her loveless marriage to an industrialist, which was virtually forced on her as the only way to revive her father's fortunes, and an account of both sisters' relationship with a young agitator to whom they give refuge in their father's mansion. This effectively links the family's destiny with that of modern Canada, as we see the rise of a new, ruthless and philistine class of self-made men, and at the same time the growing menace of European fascism.

"It's a book about an older woman, about the age of one of my uncles," says Atwood. "It's real life, it takes us through several decades. I could say it's writing about mothers, writing about sisters, which I hadn't done before." The broad timespan of the novel allows Atwood to examine the effects that World War I had on Canadian society at the time. "[The war] is one thing I wanted to write about. It ruined Uncle Freddie, my father's older brother. He was in it. He got gassed, and was never the same. So I wanted to write about that."

Implicit in this novel is the difficulty of conveying experience accurately in words, a preoccupation of Atwood's earlier novels. The heroine of 'The Handmaid's Tale' (short-listed for the Booker Prize in 1985) is trapped in a cruel dystopia that stifles free expression, banning women from even reading and writing. 'Alias Grace' (Booker short-listed in 1996) tells the story of a real 19th century Canadian, Alice Marks, who was jailed for almost 30 years after a notorious double murder for which her guilt was never incontrovertibly established. "A lot of what is written down is either wishful thinking or spiteful gossip," Atwood says. In 'The Blind Assassin' she keeps us guessing, as the narrator moves us through her own developing understanding and acquisition of knowledge, until the tragic event described in the book's first sentence can be fully understood.

A virtuoso feat of construction and psychological examination, 'The Blind Assassin' suggests not only the tortuous paths that lead to understanding but also the subterfuges by which humans prevent themselves from confronting unpalatable truths about their own actions. Written with wit and compassion, this justly rewarded novel is a disturbing and moving entertainment.

This edition's table of contents
TIME Europe home


More stories from TIME Europe and related links

E-mail us at mail@timeatlantic.com

Like what you're reading?
Click here to try 4 FREE ISSUES of TIME






More Stories

Unlocking the Creative Trunk
TIME talks with Margaret Atwood, author of 'The Blind Assassin' and winner of this year's Booker Prize

COVER STORY
Long Wait
There are lessons to be learned by the candidates, the teams and the people as the process goes on and on

EUROPE
Back to the Ballot
Democratic elections show that nationalism is still a powerful force in this divided country

Great Pretender
The election of a one-time royalist in Yugoslavia gives hope to a man whose business card reads "Crown Prince"

Mind Lab
From E-Europe: A Brussels firm helps science and business strike sparks

Welcome to the Content Metropolis
From Fast Forward Europe: How a venerable Hanseatic port shed its Old Economy image to become Germany's hottest city for digital media

MIDDLE EAST
Mubarak's Destiny
Despite some reforms, Egyptian election results warn the President of increasing voter discontent

AFRICA
Damage Control
South Africa's Thabo Mbeki moves to repair damage done by his comments on foreign and domestic issues

Nation Renovation
After years of violence, Somalia is rebuilding itself

TIME FINANCE
Speak No Evil
E.C.B. President Wim Duisenberg has unfairly taken the rap for a weak Euro

When Your Broker Is A Bookie
Something called spread betting is a new kind of investment strategy

Bourse Battles
Vienna's New Europe Exchange challenges Eastern Europe's budding stock markets

Made in Switzerland
Small companies — and savvy investors — are looking to quieter enclaves like SWX New Market for high-tech IPOs

BUSINESS
Not Yet Up to Scratch
A benchmark study shows it's a tough life for start-ups in Europe and governments still have far to go

THE ARTS
Money in his Pockets
A new kind of producer is bringing Wall Street ways to London's theaterland

Wayward Sisters
This year's Booker Prize winner is an intricate mystery that elucidates a nation's recent history

DEPARTMENTS
On Your Own Time
Hong Kong Havens: Where those in the know go to find calm and cuisine in Asia's busiest city

Worldwatch

WHAT DO YOU THINK?
E-mail us at mail@timeatlantic.com

Copyright © 2001 Time Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
E-mail us:  Letter to the Editor | Customer Service
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Press Releases