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The Robber Bride
The Robber Bride
Author: Margaret Atwood
This novel follows three women in Toronto whose lives are badly affected by the mischief of their former university friend. When she dies they assume that their troubles are over, but then she reappears, apparently more malevolent than ever. — Charis, and Roz -- All three have lost men, spirit, money, and time to their old college acquaintan...  more »
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ISBN-13: 9780385260084
ISBN-10: 0385260083
Publication Date: 10/1/1993
Pages: 466
Rating:
  • Currently 4/5 Stars.
 50

4 stars, based on 50 ratings
Publisher: Nan A. Talese
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover, Audio Cassette, Audio CD
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

jeffp avatar reviewed The Robber Bride on + 201 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
I didn't get this book. Of 466 pages it seemed as if 460 were back story, and there was little action of any kind. Instead we get a pseudo-drama, expressed in the thoughts and discussions of three women: Tony, Charis, and Roz. What little story we get revolves around a fourth woman, Zenia.

The three main characters are actually too well drawn. We don't need to know every little detail about their lives to understand why they might be reacting this way, but we get that detail in any case. And more. And still more.

Tony's a history professor with a specialization in battles. She's a fairly ineffective and self effacing person as well. Her real name is Antonia.

Charis is another ineffective character, but this time with no real talents she can earn a living from. She does, however, have a spiritual side that "works". Her real name is Karen.

Roz is a business woman - someone with power and money - but who is also hopeless in her own way. In this case it's her marriage she cannot manage. Her real name is Rosalind.

None of these characters has it all together. In fact, though they could each potentially be interesting in some sense, collectively I found them pretty annoying. They whine and worry but rarely do anything, and when they try they fail. Every time. Then they whine about failing. Roz's twin daughters are a lot more interesting than anyone else here, and they're only bit parts.

There might be something important about the fact that Tony, Roz, and Charis all operate under something other than their real names too, but if so I can't tell you what that might be.

Zenia is something else. She's a liar and a thief, and ruthless about getting whatever it is she wants - including the man each of the three main characters loves - but that's about all we learn of her. She's the central mystery around which the book is written and we never figure her out. Never.

The story is told mostly in flashbacks - sometimes nested - and it can be a bit hard to keep track of if you set the book down at the wrong point. Unfortunately I found it easy to set it down just about anywhere given the vast back story. Complicating matters, at least for me, is that I didn't really relate to any of the characters. They were either boring or irritating, but never become important or interesting.

The only reason I continued reading The Robber Bride is because I've read other work by Atwood and really enjoyed it. This one, however, just didn't work, at least not for me. It needed both something significant to happen and a resolution.

Oh, and I didn't like Charis's spiritual muck. Or rather, the fact that it "worked" in some way seemed wrong. If she'd believed in it but nothing had come of it, fine. Instead we get a couple of mystical but completely unexplained incidents that make no sense. Then again I'm less spiritual than most bricks, and such tripe is liable to irk me in any case.

Perhaps Atwood is making some feminist point, but if so I missed it, along with just about everything else.

If you want to read something good by Atwood, try The Handmaid's Tale, or Oryx and Crake. I'd skip this one.
reviewed The Robber Bride on + 18 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Very good Margaret Atwood. If you are a fan, you will love this. Story traces the effect of a very toxic woman on the lives of 3 friends over the course of about 30 years.
reviewed The Robber Bride on + 337 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I don't always enjoy Margaret Atwood but this one captured my interest. Three college acquaintances become friends after betrayals by a fourth - an intriguing, lying, "man-eating" woman named Zenia.
reviewed The Robber Bride on
Helpful Score: 1
This was a very well-written book, although the plot was not entirely to my taste. It was one of those books where I didn't find myself neglecting other things to pick it up and read, but once I sat down with it I enjoyed it. The characterizations of the women were all extremely well put together, and the storyline is an interesting mixture of present and flashbacks, from three different points of view.
selenia avatar reviewed The Robber Bride on + 7 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Let me start off by saying Margaret Atwood is a great writer. I've read several of her works and she's very descriptive--I can really "see" the visual images she protrayes (as an example, she described one of her character's lives as "an empty cardboard box abandoned sideways on the road"), however this is not one of her better books. In "Robber Bride" the characters are fully fleshed out at the expense of the plot. The plot is sickly and sacrificed for character development. This book seemed to drag on and on--I wanted to scream "get to the ending already!" and then when the ending did come it seemed rushed--an almost deus ex machina way of conclusion.
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reviewed The Robber Bride on + 73 more book reviews
I did not love this book but I liked it. I think it takes the author a bit too long to get the point of why the 3 main characters do not like the "villian" of the story. Once she tells you why, the background stories are good and the book stays interesting from there to the end.
reviewed The Robber Bride on + 67 more book reviews
This is one of Atwood's novels that is easier to get into. The book was spooky at parts but it made for a great ending. Very good read.
reviewed The Robber Bride on + 8 more book reviews
Atwood at her best
hollita34 avatar reviewed The Robber Bride on + 21 more book reviews
Atwood captures the psyche of four different women in her incredibly descriptive and captivating narrative from three of their perspectives. This text is true to Atwood steeped in symbolism, which is much less obvious than in her early works.

The book was great. While a critic called it hilarious - I would not go that far. It was witty and I think most women will be able to identify with all four characters on some level.
reviewed The Robber Bride on + 3 more book reviews
One of my favorite Margaret Atwood books....I love the exchanges between the women, and I especially loved the character of Charis. It will be impossible for you to put this oldie but a goodie down.
reviewed The Robber Bride on
I was surprised to see an "official" review state this book is a comedy or funny, in any way. I found the book to be completely depressing and shallow. That all men are dogs and will leave intelligent, competent women at the drop of a hat. Sorry that doesn't seem funny to me in the least. Also the attitude shown by the writer for the United States left a lot to be desired. I would be hard pressed to recommend this book to anyone.
reviewed The Robber Bride on + 2 more book reviews
Atwood is one of Canada's best-known authors and with good reason. Her characters are rich, the language compelling, and the story dynamic. The story begins in the 1960s and follows three women and a manipulative mysterious fourth woman who appears, disappears and then reappears again, wrecking havoc.
reviewed The Robber Bride on + 8 more book reviews
The Robber Bride is the story of three middle-aged female friends whose common bond is past experience with a hateful and destructive woman, Zenia, who lied to, stole from, and cheated each of them. When Zenia reappears after a number of years, each character recounts the pain Zenia caused and vows that she will not deceive and manipulate again. Feminism informs all of Atwood's work (see The Handmaid's Tale), and here Atwood questions the "evil" woman most of us have experienced. What breaks up the sisterhood? Are women our own worst enemies?* This one will have you thinking.

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