Thursday, December 28, 2023

Ms. Hen reviews Julia


 

Julia

Sandra Newman

Harper Collins

2023


Ms. Hen decided to read this novel because she has always been fascinated with 1984 and dystopian fiction. She heard the author on the radio recently talking about writing the book, and she said she lived in a totalitarian world while she immersed herself in it. Ms. Hen decided to read this during the Christmas season, because nothing says Christmas like dystopian fiction.

This novel is about Winston Smith's lover, Julia, from 1984. It's a feminist retelling of the novel. Ms. Hen came to realize that Julia was much more important to Winston than he was to her.

Julia works in the Ministry of Truth as a mechanic. She has had many lovers, and she works on getting Winston to become her lover because she thinks he's attractive. She lives in a hostel with a group of women, and they get along. Telescreens sit by their beds and play while they sleep. 

Julia prowls the prole district to buy black market goods. She and Winston become lovers, and she has other lovers at the same time. She works for the Thought Police in trying to expose the men. A telescreen is behind the painting in the room where she has her affairs. She gets arrested and is sent to the Ministry of Love.

This novel reminds Ms. Hen of other novels that are written now about bad women, such as EILEEN and MY YEAR OF REST AND RELAXATION by Ottessa Moshfegh. In these types of novels a woman is an anti-hero, unlike traditional women characters who are kind and nurturing and enjoy helping other people. These women are out for themselves, like to have a good time, have their own agenda, and enjoy being bad for bad's sake, but the reader can't help rooting for them. JULIA is like this.

Julia is a woman who has had a complicated life history, and she is dysfunctional is ways that are incomprehensible in today's world. She grew up in a totalitarian state, and learned that she had to survive by lying and cheating early in life, and she spends her time in pursuits of things that seem pointless, but she does these things to survive.

Ms. Hen thinks this is an important novel, and one that fans of Orwell's 1984 should read. Julia is an important character, and she ends up in a strange place, but Ms. Hen knows that she will find a way to survive.


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