Friday, August 7, 2015

Ms. Hen reviews THE BLIND ASSASSIN






THE BLIND ASSASSIN
By Margaret Atwood


Ms. Hen came across this book because it appeared it her house one day. Her chicken brother brought it to the house and never read it, and left it on the table. It took her a long time to get around to read it, but she was happy she finally did, because it swept her into a different world.

This novel is a novel within a novel, then another novel within another novel. The story winds around in different directions, with multiple characters at different times in their lives. The story is told by Iris Chase Griffin, an elderly woman looking back on her life who is in the process of writing a book for her granddaughter to read after she is gone.

The story surrounds Iris’ relationship with her sister Laura and their family. Iris and Laura’s mother dies in childbirth when they were very young. The girls remember their mother dying from the kitten that was inside her. Reenie, the housekeeper, raises the girls in place of their mother. Their father is the heir to a button factory that amassed the family fortune. They live in Fort Ticonderoga in Ontario, outside of Toronto.

Laura was always a scatterbrained girl, who grows up to be a young woman who is not quite together. Iris marries a man because her father wanted her to keep the family money. Iris is unhappily married, and immediately after her honeymoon, her father passes away.

The novel within the novel is THE BLIND ASSASSIN, written by Laura Chase, a noir piece about a woman and a man having a love affair in squalid rooms. The novel within this novel is the story that the man tells the woman that he is writing: a blind assassin rescues a mute sacrificial virgin from being raped and slaughtered, which all takes place on another planet.

The story of the blind assassin is the core of the novel. But Ms. Hen never finds out what happens to the characters. The man never told the woman the real end of the story. He told her rumors that could have happened, but never a definitive ending.This confused Ms. Hen, but she understood why it moved that way. Real life doesn’t have an ending. It just keeps going on and on.

The other novel within the novel is the one that octogenarian Iris is writing about her childhood. We go with eighty-three year old Iris through her daily life, walking to the donut shop, reading the perverse graffiti on the walls in the bathroom, trying to make sure she doesn’t fall and hurt herself.

Iris is a person who has suffered in her life, and Ms. Hen feels sorry for her. Some people have bad luck: they get mixed up with the wrong people, and they never get to love to the extent that they should have loved. Iris never finds true peace, but she has secrets. She has her traveling trunk that held her trousseau that hides all her memories. She plans on leaving the trunk to her granddaughter when she died. She wants the truth of her past to be known.

Ms. Hen loved this book. It is many different stories at once, and the sadness of the characters holds depth. Ms. Hen doesn’t remember the last time she read such a many-faceted novel that brought her to multiple places. Ms. Hen gives this novel an enthusiastic five feathers up.



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