In the County, men hold all of the power. But when a girl turns sixteen, she enters the "Grace Year" and is
consumed by forces so powerful that she threatens the entire
community. To protect the rest, all sixteen year-old
girls are sent away to live (or die) on an isolated island for a year. Surrounded by “poachers” who will skin them
alive if they try to escape because the flesh and blood of the girls is highly desired (and illicitly bought) by men who crave the magic that it allegedly
possesses. Those young women who survive and return
will be married off or sent out to a life of labor or prostitution.
Tierney has always been her father’s daughter, willful and
rebellious, and it’s gotten her into a fair share of trouble. But it has also given her the strength and
resourcefulness to survive the ordeal. Yet she will find that the physical harshness of exile is not the greatest
challenge. Far more dangerous than the
poachers and the wilds that surround them are the
girls themselves. Petty jealousies between the girls (over who will marry at the end of the year and who will be sent into labor) face
them off each other and put everyone in danger.
Part Handmaid’s Tale and
part Lord of the Flies, this dark and
brutal dystopia explores society's fetishization of feminine adolescence. The treatment is gory and bloody
and thoroughly unpleasant. Tierney is one of the tougher heroines you’ll ever meet, but she also a powerful leader and her aforementioned resourcefulness and intelligence serves her well. In telling her story, Ligget pulls no punches and the storytelling makes no attempt at subtlety. The book is vivid. It’s apparently been optioned for a movie, although one imagines that the gruesome nature of the book will need to be toned down if the target adolescent audience is going to be able to access it.
What makes the novel so interesting to me are the arguments it makes about society's treatment of sexuality and sexual inequality. This is not just a criticism of patriarchy (as people so often misread Margaret Atwood's classic). Ligget’s point that women
weaken themselves by being their own worst enemies is powerful and
controversial stuff. It fleshes out the
usual anti-patriarchal dystopian by showing in Foucaldian terms the way the
prisoners aid the jailers, the way that girls' gazes on each other are every bit as violent as men's. The novel’s non-traditional
ending, with its rejection of traditional literary forms is both its own
rebellion against patriarchy and strikingly original. Formidable and provocative.