Friday, July 10, 2020

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Title:The Edible Woman
Author:Margaret Atwood
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:First Edition
Pages:Pages: 310 pages
Published:June 1998 by Anchor (first published December 31st 1969)
Categories:Fiction. Feminism. Cultural. Canada. Classics. Literary Fiction. Contemporary. Novels
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The Edible Woman Paperback | Pages: 310 pages
Rating: 3.68 | 28668 Users | 1654 Reviews

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Marian is determined to be ordinary. She lays her head gently on the shoulder of her serious fiancé and quietly awaits marriage. But she didn't count on an inner rebellion that would rock her stable routine, and her digestion. Marriage à la mode, Marian discovers, is something she literally can't stomach...

The Edible Woman is a funny, engaging novel about emotional cannibalism, men and women, and the desire to be consumed.

Details Books Concering The Edible Woman

Original Title: The Edible Woman
ISBN: 0385491069 (ISBN13: 9780385491068)
Edition Language: English
Characters: Marian McAlpin, Ainsley Tewce, Peter Wollander
Setting: Toronto, Ontario(Canada)


Rating About Books The Edible Woman
Ratings: 3.68 From 28668 Users | 1654 Reviews

Rate About Books The Edible Woman
Written just before the founding of NOW, The Edible Woman is as relevant today as it was in 1965. The novels protagonist, Marian, has recently graduated from college and is working for a public opinion company. She is dating a man, Peter, who everyone thinks is perfect. Once engaged Marian begins to have trouble eating. As she is consumed by her relationship, she stops being able to consume food. In the first sex scene in The Edible Woman, which is rich in messages and metaphors, Peter decides

Margaret Atwoods prescient first novel still offers lots to chew onMarian, a 20-something woman in 1960s Toronto, gets engaged to her dull-but-respectable lawyer boyfriend, Peter, then soon begins losing her appetite for food. This causes problems leading up to the wedding, as Marian suffers a serious identity crisis. Perhaps she doesnt want to submit to this marriage, after all.This was Margaret Atwoods first novel, and besides the funny and insightful writing, the book was way ahead of its

I decided to re-read this because its white spine always calls my attention next to the black spines of Austen and Brontë. My review from two and a half years ago, to paraphrase Talking Heads, seems to talk a lot but not say anything. The Edible Woman was Atwood's first novel, and thus I must treat it like a first novel. Atwood was twenty-six when she wrote this, and it reads like it. The novel presents itself as a tale of a women who is faced with the awful prospect of marriage. The thought of

trailing herself, like a many-plumed fish-lure with glass beads and three spinners and seventeen hooks, through the likely looking places, good restaurants and cocktail bars with their lush weed-beds of philodendrons, where the right kind of men might be expected to be lurking, ravenous as pike, though more maritally inclined. But those men, the right kind, weren't biting, or had left for other depths, or were snapping at a different sort of bait - some inconspicuous brown minnow or tarnished

Written in 1965, this is a protofeminist work that anticipated second wave feminism in North America - and it is important to keep that in mind when reading it, because fortunately, some aspects seem outdated for today's readers; unfortunately though, other aspects are still upsettingly relevant. Discussing gender stereotypes and consumerism, the story is told from the perspective of Marian, a young woman who works for a market research company and slowly loses her sense of self after getting



3.5/5 stars. This is an interesting book that deals with the theme of femininity. I liked the foreword a lot in which Margaret Atwood explains that she actually wrote this book before femininity became a subject for discussion in society. It's striking how Atwood hits spot on on some things that nowadays seem evident or at least understandable. Marian is a funny, and at times frustrating, character who doesn't really know what she wants. Does she want to go with the flow and get married?

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