The Wall Street Journal - 07.09.2019 - 08.09.2019

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C8| Saturday/Sunday, September 7 - 8, 2019 ** THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.**


BOOKS


‘Death solves all problems. No man, no problem.’—JOSEPH STALIN


“The Testaments” grows from this
fertile mixture of politics and pop
culture. The story is set about 15 years
after the conclusion of the previous
novel, and it braids together the nar-
rations of three women who play a
collective role in undermining the
foundations of Gilead. The first is Aunt
Lydia, one of the most celebrated
“Founders” of the Republic and the
acknowledged head of operations
for the distaff world. “I control the
women’s side of [the regime’s] enter-
prise with an iron fist in a leather
glove in a woolen mitten,” she writes
in the clandestine journal she’s begun
to keep for the benefit of posterity.
Aunt Lydia is like a cross between a
Nazi kapo, doing the brutal bidding
of the ruling patriarchy, and a CIA
director, silently amassing power by
learning everybody’s secrets. Though
she has been fully complicit in Gilead’s
crimes, she is also playing a long game
of revenge against the men who made
her into a monster, and she intends to
“go out with a far bigger bang” than
a quiet and obedient death.
The other chapters come from the
testimonies of two teenage girls. One is
a Canadian named Daisy, whose parents
are involved with Mayday, the resistance
group devoted to smuggling women and
children out of Gilead and into Canada
on the “Underground Femaleroad.” The
second is Agnes, a girl raised in one of
Gilead’s wealthiest households and who,
like Daisy, comes to be linked with Aunt
Lydia’s conspiracy.
Which leads me to a question: Does
the name Agnes mean anything to you?
How you answer depends on whether
you have watched the TV adaptation of
“The Handmaid’s Tale,” because it’s
there, and not in the book, that Agnes
is introduced as a named character.
From the first pages of “The Testa-
ments” a division is established among


ContinuedfrompageC7


ory. There is a particular aptness to the
class titles: the Commanders, who
wage distant wars and seem largely
aloof from daily life; the Aunts, who
police the womenfolk in their brutal,
maternal fashion; the Marthas, who
cook and clean and gossip; and most
unnerving of all, the child-bearing
Handmaids, who are renamed to reflect
their status as the property of the men
they serve. The novel “The Handmaid’s
Tale” is ambiguous and inconclusive.
(Offred’s fate, for instance, is left un-
certain.) It sets out its richly allusive
elements without attempting to resolve
them. It works through implication,
and its triumph is principally a triumph
of language.
“The Testaments,” in contrast, is a
work of explanation. Ms. Atwood has
said that she was inspired to write it
by the questions people have bom-
barded her about the fate of Gilead and
its characters, and she has devised a
story that ties up the loose ends left
by both the book and the TV drama
(though she has shrewdly given herself
an opening for a further installment,
as well).
Ultimately, the difference between
the two novels can be boiled down to
the difference between “What does this
mean?” and “What happens?,” which is
also a way of describing the difference
between literature and entertainment.
Screen adaptations have always been
treated warily (if not contemptuously)
by writers because they have a way of
diminishing the possibilities of inter-
pretation. They spell out what is meant
to be abstract. In fact, every book is
“adapted” countless times, in the imag-
inations of its readers, and the best
books are those that give our imagina-
tions the freest rein to play.
“The Handmaid’s Tale” did that by
conjuring a world just aslant from our
own, partly historical, partly futuristic,
partly foreign, partly recognizable,
partly horrifying, partly sympathetic,
fierce in its convictions but sufficiently
open-ended to allow different readings
and conclusions. It’s a novel for all
readers. With “The Testaments,” Ms.
Atwood has written one for the fans.

Mr. Sacks reviews fiction for
The Wall Street Journal.

Margaret


Atwood’s


‘Testaments’


FIVE BESTBOOKS ON STALIN’S GREAT TERROR


The Diary of a
Gulag Prison Guard
By Ivan Chistyakov (2016)


1


The diary of Ivan Chistyakov, a
senior guard at the Baikal-Amur
Corrective Labor Camp in
eastern Russia, delivers a rare
insight into the mind of a Stalin-era
rank-and-file secret policeman—a
man caught in a world not so much of
evil as of senseless stupidity. His diary
covers the period 1935-36 and fills
two neatly written exercise books,
donated to the Memorial historical
organization by a relative and later
published. Its crushingly bleak
portrait of casual violence, escape
attempts and unfulfillable quotas all
play out in the deadly dark and cold
of a Siberian winter. “Minus 45
degrees. The trains run slowly,” writes
Chistyakov on Dec. 10, 1935. “Only
the moon, with a superior air, glides
serenely through the sky...thestove
warms you on one side while you
freeze on the other.” Chistyakov,
an educated man, feels powerless
to control not only his drunken
subordinates but also the exasper-
atingly violent and lazy (in his esti-
mation) convicts. “I’m beginning to
have that mark on my face, the stamp
of stupidity, narrowness, a kind of
moronic expression,” he writes. “My
heart is so desolate, it alarms me.”
Chistyakov may be standing in the
freezing wind on the outside of the
wire, but he is almost as much a pris-
oner as the prisoners he’s guarding.


The Gulag Archipelago
By Alexander Solzhenitsyn (1973)


2


How is it possible to put two
strangers in a room—one an
executioner, the other a
prisoner—and not only
persuade one to kill the other but
convince both that this murder serves
some higher purpose? During his
eight years in the Gulag, Alexander
Solzhenitsyn felt the full brunt of
Stalin’s police state “on his own hide,”
in the Russian phrase. His epic “Gulag
Archipelago,” a “literary investiga-


Owen Matthews


His latest book, ‘An Impeccable Spy: Richard Sorge, Stalin’s Master Agent,’ will be published in December


WITNESS Alexander Solzhenitsyn in Vladivostok in 1994.


REUTERS

The Whisperers
By Orlando Figes (2007)

5


On a December night in 1937,
my grandmother Marfa
Bibikova was arrested as
the wife of an enemy of the
people. My mother, then not yet 4,
remembers the policemen’s leather
boots, the screaming, the sight of her
elder sister breaking free from the
grip of her captor to run after the
retreating police van that bore her
mother to the Gulag. “The Whisperers,”
by Orlando Figes, is full of similar
heart-wrenching stories, mostly
drawn from interviews and letters,
as well as from the archives. Mr. Figes
gives a human face and voice to the
tide of suffering. One is Zinaida
Bushueva, who, like my grandmother,
was separated from her children for
more than a decade. She returned a
broken woman. “She would never
show affection, she would never
stroke our hair or hold us close,”
recalls Bushueva’s daughter. “She
gave us nothing spiritually or
emotionally. The truth is, after the
camp, she had nothing to give.”

its readers. If you’ve seen the show you
know that Agnes is the daughter who
was stolen from Offred during the
Gilead takeover and then given to one
of the ruling families. If you haven’t,
she is simply a young woman with a
mysterious background.
This gap in understanding figures in
every aspect of the plot. Daisy’s fate is
tied up with that of Baby Nicole, who,
in season 3 of the series, is secreted
into Canada, sparking an international
incident between the countries. And
while many details sync with the TV
show’s unfolding storyline, others ap-
pear to purposely diverge from what
devoted viewers have been led to
expect. I’ll leave the exegeses to the
Wiki fan pages and Reddit discussion
boards. Suffice it to say that certain
nuances of “The Testaments” will be
missed by those who have merely read
“The Handmaid’s Tale.” All sequels pre-
suppose a certain degree of background
knowledge, but this is the first time
you need a subscription to Hulu.
And that, I think, is a noteworthy
development. Ms. Atwood is listed as a
consulting producer for the TV show,
so perhaps it will emerge that she has
also had a chair in the writers’ room.
Whatever the situation, I can’t think of
another case in which an author has
formally legitimized a production com-
pany’s changes to her fictional world.
(The HBO series “Game of Thrones”
was famously forced to advance beyond
the published material, but presumably
George R.R. Martin, should he ever
complete his book series, will override
the show’s deviations.) We are here
dealing with something categorically

different from a literary sequel. More
accurately, “The Testaments” is a new
installment in a multimedia franchise.
But it’s also that most humble thing:
a book. What if you were to read it
without boning up on episode recaps?
You’d find an engaging if largely insub-
stantial page turner. The unsettling
political questions evoked by the pre-
vious novel are only glossed here, as
Ms. Atwood concentrates on the stage-
craft of the espionage plot. Brisk,
amusing scenes depict Aunt Lydia’s
machinations against her fellow Aunts
and Gilead’s ruler, the blundering, wife-
murdering Commander Judd. Daisy
and Agnes are gradually recruited into
her scheme and work as moles in
Gilead’s backrooms before attempting a
high-wire escape to Canada with a
cache of damaging documents.
The most disappointing effect of
this streamlining is the way it flattens
the writing. The girls’ testimonies have
been scaled back to strictly functional
accounts of events (“I will now describe
the preparations leading up to my
proposed marriage,” and so on), and
while Aunt Lydia’s chapters are tex-
tured by remorse and anger, she has
the frustrating habit of expressing
everything in clichés. “You don’t be-
lieve the sky is falling until a chunk
of it falls on you,” she says, recalling
the rise of Gileadean fascism.
Yet there are memorable passages,
particularly in the chapters about
Agnes’s upbringing, when the spinning
of the plot’s gears is put on hold and
Ms. Atwood returns to exploring the
inner workings of her fictional micro-
cosm. This is the uncanny, paradoxical

world organized around rumor, fright-
ening innuendo and hermetic sacred
rituals, in which women are the main
day-to-day enforcers of their own
oppression. It’s a place where girls are
at once fanatically protected and sub-
jected to the most shocking abuses, and
where motherly love is allowed full
expression but also co-opted as a
weapon of the state. “The reality is that
many children were loved and cher-
ished, in Gilead as elsewhere, and many
adults were kind though fallible, in
Gilead as elsewhere,” Agnes observes
at the start of her testimony, and it is
in the subtle warping and twisting
of values we share as our own that
“The Testaments” is at its best.
These moments are reminders of
the eerie potency of Ms. Atwood’s orig-
inal creation. The dystopia in the novel
“The Handmaid’s Tale” was forged
from a striking variety of sources. One
was America’s Puritan past, as aspects
of Gilead closely resemble the clerical
state of “The Scarlet Letter.” (Cleverly
and provocatively, the fundamentalist
government situates itself in the halls
of Harvard University.) Another influ-
ence was the all-seeing Communist
Party of the Soviet Union, alluded to by
the massive, looming wall bedecked
with the hanged bodies of heretics. But
this is also a modernized place of per-
verse corporate euphemisms. Citizens
worship together at Prayvaganzas. The
word “particicution” makes the savage
executions meted out by frothing
Handmaids sound almost like a team-
building exercise.
As in Orwell’s Oceania, terminology
is crucial to Gilead’s hold on the mem-

OBEY From ‘The Handmaid’s Tale: The Graphic Novel,’ adapted by Renée Nault (Nan A. Talese, 240 pages, $22.95).


NAN A. TALESE

tion” of the history of Stalin’s terror,
is the most thoroughly researched,
deeply felt work ever written on the
subject. Yet in all its exhausting and
exhaustive detail, from the exact
dimensions of the tiny, blacked-out
holding cages to the horrors of being
transported across the 10 time zones
of the U.S.S.R. to frozen hellholes in
the Arctic, the central question
remains: “Where did this wolf-tribe
appear from among our own people?”
Solzhenitsyn asks of the hundreds of
thousands of ordinary, decent Soviet
men and women who were ready to
justify and even participate in the
massacre of their fellows. “Does it
really stem from our own roots? Our
own blood? It is ours.” Solzhenitsyn’s
explanation is that “the line dividing
good from evil cuts through the heart
of every human being. And who is
willing to destroy a piece of their own
heart?” That has the ring of truth.
Still it does not explain, as perhaps
nothing can, the enormity of the
mass delusion that was Stalinism—
one that claimed up to 15 million lives
through execution, man-made famine
and forced labor.

Faithful Ruslan
By Georgi Vladimov (1976)

3


Russians look to their writers
not only to think but to live
more deeply than ordinary
mortals. The greatest among
them—martyrs of Stalinism
Nadezhda Mandelstam, Varlam
Shalamov and Alexander Solzhenitsyn
—are well known. But a younger, less-
famous generation of Soviet writers
also faced persecution and exile for
revealing the horrors of the Gulag.
In Georgi Vladimov’s novel “Faithful
Ruslan,” the hero is a fanatically
faithful guard dog who is turned free
by his master, a prison guard. Rooted
in the false hope of Khrushchev’s
thaw, the story is a brilliant allegory
of the confusions that come with
sudden liberty. “With his steaming
tongue lolling to one side, blinking
guiltily, twitching his ears,” Vladimov
writes, “Ruslan honestly admitted
that he was helpless” to refuse his
unwanted liberation. Chillingly,
Ruslan—like so many other faithful
believers—yearns for old certainties
and devotion to the cause. Even at the

hour of his death, he remains utterly
steadfast in a code of absolute loyalty
to the masters who know best.

The Great Terror
By Robert Conquest (1968)

4


It’s hard to overestimate
the impact that Robert
Conquest’s extraordinary
study had on the West’s
perceptions of Soviet history. Using
rare Soviet materials, some published
during the Khrushchev thaw, others
in self-published samizdat format,
the British historian put together an
authoritative chronicle of Stalin’s
murderous reign. Western communists
and fellow travelers dismissed the
book as propaganda. But when Soviet
archives were partially opened in
1991, Conquest’s estimates of 700,000
“legal” executions during 1937-38—
and of the total number of other
deaths thanks to the Soviet terror
campaigns (“hardly lower than some
fifteen million”)—were proven
chillingly
accurate.
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