March 2018: Alias Grace, by Margaret Atwood
This month's book is...
I am including a link here, which will take you to Amazon.com, but PLEASE, if you have the option, buy it from your favorite local bookstore! I purchased my copy at Bard's Alley. P.S. The gorgeous calligraphy above was created by my extraordinarily-talented friend Kayla! Check out her work on instagram @kayla_elaine_calligraphy
(BONUS: Alias Grace has been made into a spectacularly addictive and binge-worthy Netflix Miniseries. You're welcome.)
Intrigued by contemporary reports of a sensational murder trial in 1843 Canada, Atwood has drawn a compelling portrait of what might have been. Her protagonist, the real life Grace Marks, is an enigma. Convicted at age 16 of the murder of her employer, Thomas Kinnear, and his housekeeper and lover, Nancy Montgomery, Grace escaped the gallows when her sentence was commuted to life in prison, but she also spent some years in an insane asylum after an emotional breakdown.
Because she gave three different accounts of the killings, and because she was accused of being the sole perpetrator by the man who was hanged for the crime, Grace's life and mind are fertile territory for Atwood. Adapting her style to the period she describes, she has written a typical Victorian novel, leisurely in exposition, copiously detailed and crowded with subtly drawn characters who speak the embroidered, pietistic language of the time. She has created a probing psychological portrait of a working-class woman victimized by society because of her poverty, and victimized again by the judicial and prison systems.
The narrative gains texture and tension from the dynamic between Grace and an interlocutor, earnest young bachelor Dr. Simon Jordan, who is investigating the causes of lunacy with plans to establish his own, more enlightened institution. Jordan is hoping to awaken Grace's suppressed memories of the day of the murder, but Grace, though uneducated, is far wilier than Jordan, whom she tells only what she wishes to confess. He, on the other hand, is handicapped by his compassion, which makes him the victim of the wiles of other women, too--his passionate, desperate landlady, and the virginal but predatory daughter of the prison governor. These encounters give Atwood the chance to describe the war between the sexes with her usual wit.
Although the narrative holds several big surprises, the central question--Was Grace dupe and victim or seductress and instigator of the bloody crime?--is left tantalizingly ambiguous.
(Summary via PublishersWeekly.com)