Lady Oracle

Lady Oracle is a novel by Margaret Atwood that parodies Gothic romances and fairy tales.[1] It was first published by McClelland and Stewart in 1976.

Lady Oracle
First edition
AuthorMargaret Atwood
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish
PublisherMcClelland and Stewart
Publication date
1976
Media typePrint
Pages376
ISBN978-0-7710-0838-2
OCLC38592400
Preceded bySurfacing 
Followed byLife Before Man 

Plot summary

The novel's protagonist, Joan Foster, is a romance novelist who has spent her life running away from difficult situations. The novel alternates between flashbacks from the past and scenes from the present. Through flashbacks, the reader sees her first as an overweight child whose mother constantly criticizes her, and later, hiding her career, her past as the mistress of a Polish count, and her affair with a performance artist called The Royal Porcupine, from her bipolar husband Arthur.[2]

In the present, she has recently published a volume of feminist poetry which becomes a breakthrough success and is overwhelmed by the pressures of sudden fame. Joan panics after receiving a blackmail attempt from someone who has found out about her secrets. With the help of two acquaintances, she fakes her own death and then flees to Italy.[3]

Awards

The novel was co-winner, with Margaret Gibson's short story collection The Butterfly Ward, of the City of Toronto Book Award in 1977.[4] In 1978, it was the second prize winner, behind Robertson Davies' novel Fifth Business, of the Periodical Distributors of Canada's award for the best fiction published in paperback.[5]

gollark: Deploying antimemetic counter-antimemes.
gollark: Contingency UNREELED EMBLEM engaged.
gollark: SCP-[REDACTED]
gollark: I see. In that case, activating Protocol SKELETAL TOWPATHS.
gollark: `gdb` is a debugger, not a dedebugger, so you are wrong.

References

  1. Arnold E. and Cathy N. Davidson, "MARGARET ATWOOD'S LADY ORACLE: THE ARTIST AS ESCAPIST AND SEER". Studies in Canadian Literature, Volume 03, Number 2 (1978).
  2. "Read it for its gracefulness, for its good story, for its help in your fantasy life". The Globe and Mail, September 4, 1976.
  3. "A contrary critic takes a crack at Lady Oracle: The Globe reviewer loved Atwood's latest novel. So did others. But what of the view from abroad? We asked a noted British critic." The Globe and Mail, October 9, 1976.
  4. "Archeologist, nurse, hockey player among winners of merit awards". The Globe and Mail, March 5, 1977.
  5. "Davies wins book award". The Globe and Mail, November 1, 1978.
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