Wednesday, March 13, 2024

Ms. Hen reviews Yours for the Taking


 

Yours for the Taking

Gabrielle Korn

St. Martin's Press

2023


Ms. Hen does not remember why she chose to read this book, but she had it on hold at the library for a long time. A lot of people wanted to read this novel ahead of her, and she understands why. It's fantastic.

Yours for the Taking is about the environment, and where the world is heading. Everyone knows that the Earth is getting warmer, and we are heading towards major crises, and this novel addresses this in a most interesting way.

This novel is about a woman, Jacqueline Millender, who invests in a place called Inside that will house people in New York City to protect them from the environment. She secretly plans to only let young, educated women into Inside, and nobody knows this except the people working for her. The women who are accepted don't even know, until they get there.

The narrative centers around different characters who are involved in the Inside project. Shelby, Jacqueline's assistant, lives on the space shuttle with her, and leaves her family behind. Ava separates from her girlfriend, Orchid, and moves to Inside, and makes a life there. Olympia is the medical director of Inside, and works as Jacqueline's person in charge of the operation.

Ms. Hen loved this book because it asks so many questions, such as: Where are we headed with environmental issues? What would an all women society look like? Do women need men to survive? Would people be comfortable being trapped inside a place if they knew that would be the only way to survive? What is it like for a child to grow up, and never breathe the air outside or see the sun?

Ms. Hen thinks this is an important novel, and one that should be read and evaluated by the type of people that care about the way the world is headed.

Another aspect of this novel that Ms. Hen adored is the ending - it is not an explosive Hollywood ending, but the type of finale that forces the reader to take a breath after finishing the last sentence. The story will go on, but we don't need to know the end, and it is not wrapped up in a bow. This reminds Ms. Hen of the endings of the stories of Katherine Anne Porter, the type that leaves the imagination running, after the last word. 

Ms. Hen recommends this novel to anyone who is a fan of dystopian fiction, feminism, and imagination. And also hope.


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