Rendered in forty pages of rich but effortless prose, the first chapter...is about as shocking and vivid as they come, setting an energetic pace for the novel that Atwood largely sustains throughout. But perhaps even more impressive than Atwood’s ability to hook readers is how clearly the beginning of A Real Animal outlines the novel’s scope and focus on love and violence, nature and instinct, selfhood and family ... A sprawling character study and psychological portrait of a young woman searching for her sense of self ... It is Lucy’s consistently recognizable voice that seems to bring all of the story’s threads together. Sharp, memorable, and wrought with a kind of stark honesty that makes for an instantly compelling character, the novel’s subsequent chapters grant readers the time and space to witness the ways in which Lucy’s experiences, desires, and choices impact and shape her worldview over the long term.
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