Cut and Thirst: A Short Story
3.3 3.3 out of 5 stars | 17,201 ratings
Price: 1.99
Last update: 12-28-2024
About this item
Three women scheme to avenge an old friend in a darkly witty short story about loyalty, ambition, and delicious retribution by Margaret Atwood, the #1 bestselling author of The Handmaid’s Tale.
Myrna, Leonie, and Chrissy meet every Thursday to sample fine cheeses, to reminisce about their former lives as professors, and lately, to muse about murder. Decades ago, a vicious cabal of male poets contrived—quite publicly and successfully—to undermine the writing career, confidence, and health of their dear friend Fern. Now, after Fern has taken a turn for the worse, her three old friends decide that it’s finally time to strike back—in secret, of course, since Fern is far too gentle to approve of a vendetta. All they need is a plan with suitably Shakespearean drama. But as sweet and satisfying as revenge can be, it’s not always so cut and dried.
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Top reviews from the United States
Margaret Atwood does try to make C&T's story funny, a sort of Sex and the City meets the movie Red with some witty dialogs about academic life and quotes from Othello and Macbeth and references to Bernard Shaw and Marlene Dietrich. But at least to me funny does not necessarily translate into fun, because at the end there is no real good reason in C&T for the plot to move into crime, as originally plan. Even the ladies, as characters in the story, have doubts about their motivations, and not for absurdist reasons. Some people may accuse me of being as insensitive as one of the men in the story, but the story didn't click to me. I must admit, however, that I've just arrived from the arid lands of Comala in Pedro Paramo after a long stay in Wuthering Heights. It is really unfair to use the same bar of these powerful novels with a much less ambicious short story. And I'm far from minimizing Atwood's work, I really think The Handmaid's Tale, the book, is a very important novel, more now than never.
The downside of this story is that to the average person, the main characters might not be relatable. They include a bohemian, an expert on the French Revolution, and a feminist professor. The other characters, either met or merely mentioned, include several authors and a geologist. There are many references, mostly to Shakespeare, which would be unknown to virtually anyone who doesn't hold at minimum a B.A. in English Literature! In short, this story would be most relevant and appealing to a retired English professor, or someone who applied their English degrees to work in publishing. I don't think this has an extremely wide audience, but the audience it does have tends to read, so there is that.
This group of older ladies were so easy to visualize and were a riot to read about. And their revenge tour was a disaster in a hilarious way while still interjecting some of the feminist social commentary that I'd expect from a Margaret Atwood story! I really enjoyed this story - especially not knowing what quite to expect when I picked it up. Clever, witty and a quick read!
I grabbed a copy of this book as part of the Amazon First Reads program.