
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
There is a downside to high expectations. Mostly in the fairly obvious way that it prevents you from enjoying something for what it is rather than what you expect it to be. I try not to go into something with such forethought, but sometimes it can't be helped. You, dear reader, might be able to do better than I. But I doubt it. Not with as something as expectantly loaded as 'The Testaments'.
This book isn't a sequel to 'The Handmaid's Tale'. Nor is it a prequel. Nor any other type of 'quel' you can imagine. It is more of a companion. By expanding the lore by a few inches, it manages to carve out another story from the sad state of Gilead. While almost as depressing and poignant as the first novel, it has a larger scope and importance to the overall lore. Trying to answer questions about the old world nation-state while keeping the perspective on two seemingly inconsequential players. Like trying to tell the entire history of Battle of the Bulge from a single private in the 101st Airborne. You get a first-hand account. Lacking a better term, it's from the trenches. The problem being that you don't get a sense of scope while things are happening and the ending plays off as a little too overly dramatic because you never learn why things are important until after the fact.
For the most part, I'm happy I read this book. I doubt I would have been content with myself otherwise. It's just a fact that I didn't walk away impressed. It has problems with its narrative structure and a number of smaller things that kind of add up over time. However, I think its biggest problem is that it doesn't really have anything new to say. 'The Handmaid's Tale' is sometimes lumped in with science fiction because it answers one of Heinlein's big three questions: What if this goes on? Over the years since Handmaid was published, radicalized religion has gotten worse, not better, and the book's foreboding tale rings louder today than it did yesterday. With that in mind, it's nearly impossible to read a companion to that book and not expect something new out of it. I just didn't find it.
I know I've given better reviews to worse books, but I can't recommend Testaments beyond being in the know of its place in literature. And FOMO is a shitty reason to read a book. Not only does this book have a loaded expectation from its source material, but also has a high bar to climb in regards of who wrote it. There is no escapism here, and nor should there be. I know it might be unfair, but books have different standards for different reasons. Literature is placed not just by what is written, but why is it written. With 'The Testaments', its reasons just weren't good enough for me.
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