Christiana Gaudet

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My Favorite Lesser-Known Dystopian Novels

An upside of social distancing is that we have time to read.
Of course, most bookstores and libraries are closed right now. To me, that in
and of itself is a horror story!

Yet, even if you don’t own a Kindle, you can download a
Kindle app for free. Many libraries are making it easy to borrow digital books
during the crisis. Amazon is still just a click away and ready to deliver books
for your Kindle app, or, if you prefer, on Audible.

Recent events, including but not limited to the global
pandemic, have sparked much speculation of our future, and the chilling tales
fiction writers have told about what could lie ahead.

I’ve always loved dystopian novels, although I only learned
the word ‘dystopian’ in the past few years. I always called the genre ‘Future
Doom and Gloom.’ I believe I stole that term from one of my favorite roommates,
back in the day. She used the term to describe movies like Mad Max and The
Terminator
.

We are all familiar with new instant classics like The
Hunger Games
trilogy, as well as older, well-loved classics like Brave
New World
, Fahrenheit 451, and 1984.

The 1980s brought us some great dystopian fiction written by
women. The Handmaid’s Tale, by Margaret Atwood, has become more famous
than ever because of the terrifying and poignant Hulu series. There was another
great lesser-known feminist dystopian novel that emerged from the 1980s. Have
you read The Gate to Women’s Country, by Sheri S. Tepper? This
post-apocalyptic tome supposes a matriarchy rising out of a nuclear war, and a
culture that separates men from women in an effort to curb violent tendencies.

Some of my favorite dystopian novels could also be
considered feminist novels, like The Handmaid’s Tale and the Gate to
Women’s Country
. I recently discovered that one of my most formative
feminist Pagan writers, Starhawk, is also a novelist.

Her dystopian stories, The Fifth Sacred Thing, its
sequel, ‘City of Refuge’, and prequel, ‘Walking to Mercury
create a terrifyingly believable future world. Yet, they are uplifting and
hopeful, because they also share a vision of the sustainable world we could
still create.

This is equally true for one of my favorite books ever, Woman
on the Edge of Time
, by author Marge Piercy. Published in 1976, this story
features a radical future vision for sustainability and equality, while
blatantly pointing out the obvious errors of our own time, known in this future
as “The Age of Greed and Waste”.

Almost twenty years later, Marge Piercy wrote a less hopeful but highly entertaining dystopian novel about a love affair between an android and a human woman, set in a future where pollution and climate change have ravaged the land, and corporations have become the government. She, He and
It
was published in 1991, and has been described as a ‘cypberpunk novel’.

We all remember Ira Levin as the brilliant author of Rosemary’s
Baby
. In my opinion, that well-loved story pales in comparison to Levin’s
dystopian novel, This Perfect Day, published in 1970.

The future world of This Perfect Day has no war and
no crime. Even the weather is regulated, all thanks to UniComp, a giant
computer which controls all aspects of life.

In these difficult times, dystopian fiction can comfort us
as we realize that, by comparison, things in real life aren’t all that bad yet.
Dystopian fiction can scare us with the similarities we see to life as we
currently know it. And, because most dystopian tales are stories of resistance
and survival, these views of our imagined future can serve to give us hope in
difficult times.