Short Stories, Irish literature, Classics, Modern Fiction, Contemporary Literary Fiction, The Japanese Novel, Post Colonial Asian Fiction, The Legacy of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and quality Historical Novels are Among my Interests








Wednesday, November 18, 2020

“The Man From Mars" A short story by Margaret Atwood - 1977 - A Post in Observation of her 81st Birthday


 


“The Man From Mars" A short story by Margaret Atwood - 1977



“Margaret Atwood Reading Month is hosted by me and Naomi at Consumed by Ink, inspired by decades of our reading Margaret Atwood’s words.

From Sunday, November 1st to Monday, November 30th we’ll be reading Margaret Atwood, and we invite you to join in! (And, don’t forget, the 18th is Margaret Atwood’s 81st birthday. We’ll be celebrating with books, quotes, and cake!) “ from Buried in Print 


This is my second post for Margaret Atwood Reading Month, my first was on her novel The Penelopiad.


  "The Man From Mars" is the first of Margaret Atwood’s short stories I have yet read.  I really liked it a lot.  It is told in the first person by Christine, a Canadian college student.  She is a "big boned" athletic woman studying political science.  Her father has an important government job so she feels she can probably secure a government position.  One day on campus an odd, shabbily dressed Asian man approaches her and strikes up a conversation.  She senses there is something wrong with him and reluctantly agrees to give him her name.  Christine is not as pretty as her two sisters and most men she meets through tennis or the debating society see her as "one of the guys".  The man calls her house and her mother, maybe relieved Christine seems to have a suiter,  suggests he come to tea one day and he invites himself next Thursday.   He begins to stalk her.  Her father calls the police who take extra care with the case because of his position. There is a lot in this story and I don't want to spoil it for potential readers by telling more of the plot.   The ending is really interesting.  


This is a story about how expectations become prophecies, about how a woman's look can fix her future, about cultural clashes and complacency and much more.


I hope to work in one more work by Margaret Atwood this month.



I read this in the excellent anthology pictured below. 






“Margaret Atwood Reading Month is hosted by me and Naomi at Consumed by Ink, inspired by decades of our reading Margaret Atwood’s words.

From Sunday, November 1st to Monday, November 30th we’ll be reading Margaret Atwood, and we invite you to join in! (And, don’t forget, the 18th is Margaret Atwood’s 81st birthday. We’ll be celebrating with books, quotes, and cake!) “ from Buried in Print 


This is my second post for Margaret Atwood Reading Month, my first was on her novel The Penelopiad.


  "The Man From Mars" is the first of Margaret Atwood’s short stories I have yet read.  I really liked it a lot.  It is told in the first person by Christine, a Canadian college student.  She is a "big boned" athletic woman studying political science.  Her father has an important government job so she feels she can probably secure a government position.  One day on campus an odd, shabbily dressed Asian man approaches her and strikes up a conversation.  She senses there is something wrong with him and reluctantly agrees to give him her name.  Christine is not as pretty as her two sisters and most men she meets through tennis or the debating society see her as "one of the guys".  The man calls her house and her mother, maybe relieved Christine seems to have a suiter,  suggests he come to tea one day and he invites himself next Thursday.   He begins to stalk her.  Her father calls the police who take extra care with the case because of his position. There is a lot in this story and I don't want to spoil it for potential readers by telling more of the plot.   The ending is really interesting.  


This is a story about how expectations become prophecies, about how a woman's look can fix her future, about cultural clashes and complacency and much more.


I hope to work in one more work by Margaret Atwood this month.



I read this in the excellent anthology pictured below.

2 comments:

Naomi said...

I haven't read this story, but it does sound interesting!
Thanks for joining in, and posting on her birthday! :)

Buried In Print said...

I've been eyeing that collection for awhile now, Mel! But I do have another copy of this story, in Dancing Girls, so I will soon understand what you mean about how the ending is "interesting". LOL We'll be sure to include your posts for #MARM in our round-up at the end of the month, and I'm keen to see what other story might catch your eye!