Margaret Atwood is a feminist writer of science fiction who has distanced herself from feminism and science fiction. It's not surprising to find the stories in her new book dramatising questions of gender and genre, although that's rather a dry way to describe a collection rich in sly humour and
Book review: Stone Mattress
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Book cover for Stone Mattress by Margaret Atwood.
It's hard not to notice that the one male character who isn't a sleaze is also gay. Fecklessness and infidelity are a given: when Atwood writes from a man's point of view, it's usually so she can hang him out to dry, as with the antique dealer, who thinks his wife will have to overlook his shortcomings because she isn't a "hot babe".
In the final story, Torching The Dusties, a militant youth group surrounds a nursing home, cutting off its supplies. It reads as if Atwood feared the book featured too many pensioners. You feel her sympathy
fork in two as she gives airtime to a perspective she won't presume to inhabit; we follow the frightened residents, not the protesters chanting "Our turn!" in baby-face masks outside.
Comic cameos from overzealous readers (Freudian scholars, fantasy fans in fancy dress) mock the notion that an author's work reflects their life. At the same time, the stories tend to portray writing as an act of revenge, as when Constance puts a one-time love rival in Alphinland, "immobilised by runic spells inside a stone beehive".
But words are only words, as Atwood seems to know. She takes the book's title from a story about a woman raped at 14 by a man she meets again 50 years later on a cruise. Her revenge? A rock to the skull.
Stone mattress
by Margaret Atwood
(Bloomsbury $45)