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Oryx and Crake (The MaddAddam Trilogy) Paperback – May 1, 2004


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NATIONAL BESTSELLER The first volume in the internationally acclaimed MaddAddam trilogy is at once an unforgettable love story and a compelling vision of the futurefrom the bestselling author of The Handmaid's Tale and The Testaments

Snowman, known as Jimmy before mankind was overwhelmed by a plague, is struggling to survive in a world where he may be the last human, and mourning the loss of his best friend, Crake, and the beautiful and elusive Oryx whom they both loved. In search of answers, Snowman embarks on a journey
with the help of the green-eyed Children of Crakethrough the lush wilderness that was so recently a great city, until powerful corporations took mankind on an uncontrolled genetic engineering ride. Margaret Atwood projects us into a near future that is both all too familiar and beyond our imagining.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“Towering and intrepid. . . . Atwood does Orwell one better.” —The New Yorker

“Atwood has long since established herself as one of the best writers in English today, but Oryx and Crake may well be her best work yet. . . . Brilliant, provocative, sumptuous and downright terrifying.” —The Baltimore Sun

“Her shuddering post-apocalyptic vision of the world . . . summons up echoes of George Orwell, Anthony Burgess and Aldous Huxley. . . . Oryx and Crake[is] in the forefront of visionary fiction.” —The Seattle Times

“A book too marvelous to miss.” —The San Diego Union-Tribune

“Majestic. . . . Keeps us on the edges of our seats.” —The Washington Post

“A compelling futuristic vision. . . . Oryx and Crake carries itself with a refreshing lightness. . . . Its shrewd pacing neatly balances action and exposition. . . . What gives the book a deeper resonance is its humanity.” –Newsday

“[A] stunning new novel–possibly her best since The Handmaid’s Tale.” –Time Out New York

“A delightful amalgam for the sophisticated reader: her perfectly placed prose, poetic language and tongue-in-cheek tone are ubiquitous throughout, as if an enchanted nanny is telling one a dark bedtime story of alienation and ruin while lovingly stroking one’s head.” –Ms.

“Truly remarkable. . . . As fun as it is dark. . . . A feast of realism, science fiction, satire, elegy and then some. . . . Atwood has concocted here an all-too-possible vision. . . . [She is] a master.” –The News & Observer (Raleigh, North Carolina)

“A roll of dry, black, parodic laughter. . . . One of the year’s most surprising novels.” –
The Economist

“Sublime. . . . Good, solid, Swiftian science fiction from a . . . literary artist par excellence.” –The Denver Post

“Dances with energy and sophisticated gallows humor. . . . [Atwood’s] wry wit makes dystopia fun.” –People

“A crackling read. . . . Atwood is one of the most impressively ambitious writers of our time.” –The Guardian

“Gorgeously written, full of eyeball-smacking images and riveting social and scientific commentary. . . . A cunning and engrossing book by one of the great masters of the form.” –The Buffalo News

“A powerful vision. . . . Very readable.” –The New York Times Book Review

“Brilliant, impossible to put down. . . . Atwood . . . is at once commanding and enchanting. Piercingly intelligent and piquantly witty, highly imaginative and unfailingly compassionate, she is a spoonful-of-sugar storyteller, concealing the strong and necessary medicine of her stinging social commentary within the balm of dazzlingly complicated and compelling characters and intricate and involving predicaments.” –The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

“Original and chilling. . . . Powerful, inventive, playful and difficult to resist.” –Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

“Brilliantly constructed. . . . Jimmy and Crake grip like characters out of Greek tragedy. . . . Atwood herself is one of our finest linguistic engineers. Her carefully calibrated sentences are formulated to hook and paralyse the reader.” –The Daily Telegraph

“Atwood does not disappoint.” –The Dallas Morning News

“Gripping. . . . Bursts with invention and mordant wit, none of which slows down its headlong pace. . . . Atwood is in sleek form. . . . [Her] prescience is unsettling.” –St. Petersburg Times

“Biting, black humor and absorbing storytelling. . . . Atwood entices.” –USA Today

“Compelling. . . . Packed with fascinating ideas. . . . Her most accessible book in years, a gripping, unadorned story.” –The Onion

“This superlatively gripping and remarkably imagined book joins The Handmaid’s Talein the distinguished company of novels (The Time Machine, Brave New Worldand 1984) that look ahead to warn us about the results of human shortsightedness.” –The Times (London)

“Absorbing. . . . Atwood ahs not lost her touch for following the darker paths of speculative fiction–she easily creates a believable, contained future world.” –
Seattle Weekly

“Engrossing. . . . A novel of ideas, narrated with an almost scientific dispassion and a caustic, distanced humor. The prose is fast and clean.” –Rocky Mountain News

“Riveting and thought-provoking. . . . Keen and cutting. . . . [Atwood] has grown into one of the most consistently imaginative and masterful fiction writers writing in English today.” –Richmond Times-Dispatch

From the Inside Flap

With the same stunning blend of prophecy and social satire she brought to her classic The Handmaids Tale, Margaret Atwood gives us a keenly prescient novel about the future of humanityand its present.

Humanity here equals Snowman, and in Snowmans recollections Atwood re-creates a time much like our own, when a boy named Jimmy loved an elusive, damaged girl called Oryx and a sardonic genius called Crake. But now Snowman is alone, and as we learn why we also learn about a world that could become ours one day.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Vintage; Reprint edition (May 1, 2004)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 389 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0385721676
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0385721677
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 10.4 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.21 x 0.85 x 7.96 inches
  • Customer Reviews:

About the author

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Margaret Atwood
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Margaret Atwood is the author of more than fifty books of fiction, poetry and critical essays. Her novels include Cat's Eye, The Robber Bride, Alias Grace, The Blind Assassin and the MaddAddam trilogy. Her 1985 classic, The Handmaid's Tale, went back into the bestseller charts with the election of Donald Trump, when the Handmaids became a symbol of resistance against the disempowerment of women, and with the 2017 release of the award-winning Channel 4 TV series. ‘Her sequel, The Testaments, was published in 2019. It was an instant international bestseller and won the Booker Prize.’

Atwood has won numerous awards including the Booker Prize, the Arthur C. Clarke Award for Imagination in Service to Society, the Franz Kafka Prize, the Peace Prize of the German Book Trade and the PEN USA Lifetime Achievement Award. In 2019 she was made a member of the Order of the Companions of Honour for services to literature. She has also worked as a cartoonist, illustrator, librettist, playwright and puppeteer. She lives in Toronto, Canada.

Photo credit: Liam Sharp

Customer reviews

4.3 out of 5 stars
4.3 out of 5
12,596 global ratings
Wrong Pages in the Middle of the Book
1 Star
Wrong Pages in the Middle of the Book
Great book which I bought for class and therefore didn't start reading until the end of October. I was very disappointed when i got to page 189 and found 50 pages from a completely different book, The Orphan Master's Son by Adam Johnson, misprinted into the middle of my book. I had to buy another copy to get my reading done in time for class. I never realized I would have to check for this kind of thing. Disappointing purchase that wasted my money.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on June 28, 2017
"Oryx and Crake" is a magnificent work of literary science fiction and Postmodernist criticism. Atwood creates a dystopia vision referencing Gore Vidal's "Kalki" and Capek's "R.U.R" combined with William Gibson's dark perspective of Late Capitalism run amok. It is also an homage to the beauty of vocabulary and its essentialness to human culture:

"He compiled lists of old words too - words of a precision and suggestiveness that no longer had a meaningful application in today's world...He memorized these hoary locutions, tossed them left-handed into conversations: wheelwright, lodestone saturnine, adamant. He'd developed a strangely tender feeling towards such words, as if they were children abandoned in the woods and it was his duty to rescue them."

This love of the lost and abandoned is, however, not limited to words but also the dispossessed people inhabiting Atwood's world. It is most forcibly projected upon the character of Oryx, a woman so commoditized by the world that she doesn't know her nationality or mother tongue anymore. She has spent her life since childhood as a sex toy for Western consumption.

Atwood creates her own version of Pasolini's "Salo" in Oryx' journey through life, one just as bitter and unavoidable as the Italian auteur's. Margaret brings viscerally to life the child bordellos of Thailand, the Italian countryside littered with Nigerian prostitutes, the smorgasbord of Dubai whorehouses, the pervasive presence of Eastern European mail-order brides in Western countries, the ubiquitous availability of pornography just a touch away on our computing devices, and the slave trade that drives all of this global commerce. And yet, this is also a story about a quest for love in a world reduced to filth and return on investment.

Truly a novel of action, entertainment, and human pathos capable of joy and horror, ennui and redemption, and worthy of both SF and literary acclaim. Have at it!
40 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on May 27, 2013
This story takes place in a bleak but believable future and keeps you reading. But I found it hard to relate to its characters. The protagonist, called Snowman, may be the last surviving human. The plot consists mostly of showing Snowman's dire situation, interspersed with flashbacks of his pre-apocalypse self (called Jimmy). Why is Snowman the only person left on the planet? What happened to Oryx and Crake? How did the world come to such a sorry state? Learning the answers is what kept me reading.

After a long series of flashbacks, the mystery is revealed. But by that time, I didn't care as much as I could have. I wasn't invested enough in the characters. I felt for Jimmy, who'd had a rough life. But since his primary trait was alienation, he never seemed to care much. Neither did I.

The plot in the present consisted mostly of Snowman trying to stay alive, half-heartedly mentoringthe Crakers (people genetically created by Crake) and avoiding gene-spliced animals. Snowman's actions served mostly as an excuse for flashbacks. But when the flashbacks caught up to the present and something was about to happen, the book ends.

There's no question Margaret Atwood knows how to write. Her style is magnificent. She weaves a beautiful word picture but never in a way that's obtrusive. And her world building in this story is fleshed out and believable. She can be a bit preachy. In The Handmaid's Tale, that preachiness bothered me, but at least I felt for the protagonist.

In Oryx and Crake, the author challenges us to take a look at our world today and argue that her bleak vision of the future is impossible. Could genetic engineering get out of control? Is western civilization shallow and materialistic? Are big corporations dangerously amoral? Sure. But this story ignores all positives. Whether her cynicism is justified or not, the mix of good and bad in humanity is what lets us attach our emotions to fictional characters.

Dystopian novels have the saving grace of a protagonist that struggles against a world gone awry. In a post-apocalyptic novel, hope has been lost, but we follow the protagonist as they trudge along bravely. Even a book as bleak as Cormac McCarthy's The Road is redeemed by the love of the man for the boy.

Oryx and Crake is a fine novel written with Atwood's admirable writing style. Her world building is solid. The mystery keeps you reading. But I was left wanting. If her main theme is that human beings suck, and we deserve to become extinct, it's disappointing.

The second book in this trilogy, The Year of the Flood,is supposed to be more hopeful. The blurb for the finale, MaddAddam, says: "this thrilling conclusion to Margaret Atwood's speculative fiction trilogy confirms the ultimate endurance of humanity, community, and love." I hope that's true. There was no sign of it in Oryx and Crake
2 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

s
5.0 out of 5 stars great!
Reviewed in Canada on March 9, 2024
This was a favourite book of mine back in school. I typically prefer paperbacks but the first ed. paperbacks were so damn ugly that I had to compromise the price point and buy a "used" hardcover. To my surprise it came in basically brand new as there was a sealed plastic covering over it, so I was very happy about that.

note: Im fairly certain I bought a "very good" condition as opposed to a "like new" condition, but there's nowhere really to for me to confirm that...
Esperaba que los libros fueran nuevos. Ya que llevaron sin plástico y maltratados.
1.0 out of 5 stars Decepción
Reviewed in Mexico on June 25, 2023
Los libros no son nuevos y llegaron maltratados.
Hubiera sido mejor comprarlos directamente en una librería.
Sofía Belén López Vicens
5.0 out of 5 stars Plays with your brain
Reviewed in Germany on November 5, 2023
Makes you question morality in general and our pursuit of purpose as part of the human condition. Recommend reading!
I liked this cover, though it's different from the one shown in the description.
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Sofía Belén López Vicens
5.0 out of 5 stars Plays with your brain
Reviewed in Germany on November 5, 2023
Makes you question morality in general and our pursuit of purpose as part of the human condition. Recommend reading!
I liked this cover, though it's different from the one shown in the description.
Images in this review
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Customer image
Bookblogger1991
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 26, 2023
Another dystopian triumph by Margaret Atwood, a genre she portrays so well. I love her writing style, she can eerily bring to life the scenes she describes and I always think her dialogue is so natural and believable. At one point I had to check when this book was published because it had scary reflections of the COVID pandemic regarding the lockdowns etc.

At first I was a bit frustrated and the jumping back and forth in the timeline and the drip feeding of information but the storyline kept me turning the pages and wanting to find out what happened next. I just feel that Atwood executes this theme so well although they always have a creepy foreboding, as if I’m looking into the future and can see glimpses of our society wound into her novels.

Brilliant from start to finish, read it in two days and can’t wait to get stuck into the next in the series, The Year of the Flood.
2 people found this helpful
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Prince
5.0 out of 5 stars Totally worth it!
Reviewed in India on November 26, 2021
The author has done an amazing job! The storytelling is stellar. Taking the readers along different tangents, building up the suspense and thrill, and finally satisfying when these different tangents meet. Story itself is something out of ordinary and interesting. I look forward to read many more books from the author!
One person found this helpful
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