The Year Of The Flood

by Margaret Atwood

McClelland & Stewart | September 8, 2009 | Hardcover

Based on 111 ratings | Rate this | 9 reviews
The long-awaited new novel from Margaret Atwood, The Year of the Flood is a brilliant visionary imagining of the future that calls to mind her classic novel The Handmaid's Tale.

Adam One, the kindly leader of God's Gardeners - a religion devoted to the melding of science and religion - has long predicted a natural disaster that will alter Earth as we know it. Now it has occurred, obliterating most human life. Two women have been spared: Ren, a young trapeze-dancer, locked inside a high-end sex club; and one of God's Gardeners, Toby, who is barricaded inside a luxurious spa. Have others survived?

By turns dark, tender, violent, thoughtful, and witty, The Year of the Flood unfolds Toby's and Ren's stories during the years prior to their meeting again. The novel not only brilliantly reflects to us a world we recognize but poignantly reminds us of our enduring humanity.
Sold Out
This item is eligible for FREE SHIPPING.
See details
save 85%

$5.00


was $32.99

$4.75


Member Price

or, Used from $5.04

Sold Out
add to wish list add to gift list
Found in: Fiction and Literature

Find it in Store

See if this item is available in a store near you.

* Prices may vary in store
find it now
Write a review using your social networks

– More About This Product –

The Year Of The Flood

The Year Of The Flood

by Margaret Atwood

Sold Out

From the Publisher

The long-awaited new novel from Margaret Atwood, The Year of the Flood is a brilliant visionary imagining of the future that calls to mind her classic novel The Handmaid's Tale.

Adam One, the kindly leader of God's Gardeners - a religion devoted to the melding of science and religion - has long predicted a natural disaster that will alter Earth as we know it. Now it has occurred, obliterating most human life. Two women have been spared: Ren, a young trapeze-dancer, locked inside a high-end sex club; and one of God's Gardeners, Toby, who is barricaded inside a luxurious spa. Have others survived?

By turns dark, tender, violent, thoughtful, and witty, The Year of the Flood unfolds Toby's and Ren's stories during the years prior to their meeting again. The novel not only brilliantly reflects to us a world we recognize but poignantly reminds us of our enduring humanity.

From the Jacket

"This is a gutsy and expansive novel, rich with ideas and conceits, but overall it's more optimistic than Oryx & Crake. Its characters have a compassion and energy lacking in Jimmy, the wounded and floating lothario at the previous novel's center. Each novel can be enjoyed independently of the other, but what's perhaps most impressive is the degree of connection between them. Together they form halves of a single epic…"
- Publisher's Weekly (starred review)

"The tremendous imaginative power of [Atwood's] fiction allows us to believe that anything is possible."
- New York Times Book Review

"Trust Margaret Atwood to put her finger on the pulse of the future…."
- Globe and Mail

"Atwood is a natural seer for an age that does not want to look too closely at what it condones, or refuses to see."
- Glasgow Herald

"Margaret Atwood has outdone - and outsung - herself this time. The Year of the Flood is at once a solemn praise song to human hope and a dead-serious poke at our capacity for self-destruction. The novel shows the Nobel Prize-worthy Margaret Atwood at the pinnacle of her prodigious creative powers."
- Elle Magazine

About the Author

Margaret Atwood's internationally bestselling fiction includes The Handmaid's Tale, Alias Grace, The Blind Assassin, and Oryx and Crake. She has received numerous awards and honours, including the Booker Prize, the Governor General's Award, and The Giller Prize. She lives in Toronto.

Bookclub Guide

1. How does the friendship between Amanda and Ren grow, despite their differences and the restrictions they face? They meet as children. Who was your greatest ally when you were that age? What do you think of Ren''s treatment of Bernice?

2. What survival skills do the novel''s female characters possess? Do they find security or vulnerability at Scales and Tales, the AnooYoo Spa, and within the community of Gardeners? What strength does Pilar find in nature, while Lucerne is drawn to artificial beauty?

3. How do Adam One''s motivations compare to Zeb''s? In their world, what advantages do men have? Are they really "advantages"?

4. Discuss Toby''s parents and their fate. What does their story illustrate about the dangers of an unregulated and corrupt drug industry? What motivates Toby to become a healer?

5. How does Adam One''s explanation of creation and the fall of humanity compare to more standard Judeo-Christian ideas? What does he offer his followers, beyond an understanding of the planet and the creatures that inhabit it?

6. Discuss the father figures in Ren''s life: her stepfather, Zeb; her biological father, Frank; and eventually Mordis. What did they teach her about being a woman? How did they shape her expectations of Jimmy?

7. As a refugee from Texas, Amanda is an outsider, facing constant risk. Would you have harbored her? Why is Ren so impressed by her?

8. What is the result of a penal system like Painball? How does it influence the citizens'' attitude toward crime?

9. Should Toby have honored Pilar''s deathbed wish that she become an Eve? How did the lessons in beekeeping serve Toby in other ways as well?

10. Crake''s BlyssPlus pill offers many false promises. What are they, and what was Crake really striving for (chapter 73)? If human beings are the greatest problem for the natural world, could they also provide solutions less drastic than Crake''s? How?

11. In what ways do the novel''s three voices-Toby''s, Ren''s, and Adam One''s-complement one another? What unique perspective is offered in each narration?

12. Explore the lyrics from The God''s Gardeners Oral Hymnbook. What do they say about the Gardener theology and the nature of their faith? Adam One does not always tell the truth to his congregation. Is well-meant lying ever acceptable?

13. Margaret Atwood''s fiction often displays "gallows humor." Can a thing be dire and funny at the same time? Must we laugh or die?

14. The Year of the Flood covers the same time period as Oryx and Crake, and contains a number of the same characters - ("Snowman," a student at the Martha Graham Academy and "the last man on earth") and Glenn ("Crake," who studied at the Watson-Crick Institute), as well as Bernice, Jimmy''s hostile college room-mate, Amanda, a live-in artist girlfriend, Ren ("Brenda,") whom he remembers briefly in Oryx and Crake as a high-school fling, Jimmy''s mother, who runs away to become an activist, and the God''s Gardeners, whom he mentions as a fringe green cult. Re-read the final pages of both books. What do you predict for the remaining characters? Should the Gardeners execute the Painballers? Why? Why not? Would you?

15. What parallels did you see between The Year of the Flood and current headlines?

Format: Hardcover

Published: September 8, 2009

Publisher: McClelland & Stewart

Language: English

The following ISBNs are associated with this title:

ISBN - 10: 0771008449

ISBN - 13: 9780771008443

  • My Gift List
  • My Wish List
  • Shopping Cart