Ratings31
Average rating3.9
Plot - Felix is a famed quirky play-director who lost his wife, then his daughter. As an attempt to bring his daughter back to life, he decides to put on a larger-than-life production of The Tempest. Unfortunately, through a sort of coup, he loses his job as director to a man Tony, who had been his friend. He goes on to live in a tiny, run-down hut and swears to get his revenge, while evermore losing his sanity. After taking up a job under a false name to teach English to prison inmates, he finally sees the perfect opportunity for revenge.
The book - which appropriately reads more like a play, is part of the Hogarth series, in which contemporary authors put their own spin on classic Shakespearean plays. Here Atwood tackles The Tempest, and I should say with great success. I've never read the Tempest before but I've seen it performed a couple times, and only now do I feel like I understand it. Atwood not only recreates it, but so interestingly layers on the meta-theatrical aspect. She unpacks a lot of the stuff of the play herself, then through this complex layering of plays within plays, fictions within fictions, and prisons within prisons, she gives us infinitely more to unpack.
I'd definitely recommend this to any Shakespeare lover, or Atwood lover, or lover of theater... this was a light, and delightfully playful read.