Oryx and Crake

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Oryx and Crake
Written by: Margaret Atwood
Central Theme:
Synopsis:
Genre(s): Post-Apocalypse
Series: MaddAddam trilogy
Followed by: The Year of the Flood
First published: 2003
v · d · e

Oryx and Crake is a 2003 novel by Margaret Atwood.

"Snowman" is a storyteller and teacher of lore to a new species of sapient beings. He has reason to believe he is the last of the old human beings; humanity and its civilization has been wiped out in a plague.

This novel alternates between Flash Backs and "present-day." In the flashbacks, he tells about growing up and living with his best friend. They are privileged, living in a walled compound run by drug companies. Genetic engineering is very common in society; they engineer super-pigs to better model human diseases, for instance. His best friend becomes very interested in biology and genetic engineering; he eventually takes on the nickname "Crake" when the pair start playing the game "Extinctathon." (Our protagonist is no good at it, as there are many extinct species and most of them are not big, cute, or prominent. Crake becomes an expert.)

In the present, something goes horribly wrong in a foraging mission, and Snowman has to go to one of the now-ruined and abandoned complexes for shelter - specifically, the one he used to live in. The two storylines do converge.

A sequel, The Year of the Flood (2009), has been published; rather than continuing the plot, it details what other characters are/were doing during the events of the first novel. Together, the books make up the first two thirds of the announced "MaddAddam Trilogy."


Tropes used in Oryx and Crake include:

Sometimes in the dusk he runs up and down on the sand, flinging stones at the ocean and screaming, Shit, shit, shit, shit, shit! He feels better afterwards.

  • The Chessmaster: Crake in the literal and Troperiffic sense.
  • Crapsack World: Atwood makes a fairly compelling case that human civilization deserves to be exterminated.
    • More like has to be exterminated. Crake's reason for what he did was that if he didn't do it, humanity would utterly destroy itself, thus exterminating all intelligent life. Crake got rid of humanity, but to save intelligent life he created the children of crake.
  • Crowning Moment of Funny: Despite, you know, the fact that everyone on earth is dead, Atwood has written a book that is at times truly hilarious.
  • Decade Dissonance: Between the Compounds and the pleeblands.
  • Dystopia
  • Early-Bird Cameo: Jimmy's briefly-mentioned girlfriends from the first book, Brenda and Amanda, are the main characters of the second book.
  • Everyone Went to School Together: Present in the first book, taken to almost ridiculous levels in the second.
  • Evolutionary Levels (possibly subverted)
  • Evilutionary Biologist
  • Freak-Out
  • Gambit Roulette: It's implied that Crake had been working on his life's work for a long time. His mother's death was caused by a virus that was very similar to the one he later unleashed upon earth. See Self-Made Orphan above.
  • Garden of Evil
  • Genetic Engineering Is the New Nuke: And how.
  • Go Mad from the Revelation: It's later confirmed in The Year Of The Flood that there are a lot more people left than Snowman thinks, and they aren't all as crazy as Snowman. This is probably because they do not know what caused the plague, because the person who caused it wasn't their best friend, and because they don't have to relive their memories over and over again to find out where it went wrong and where Snowman could have prevented it all.
  • Hooker with a Heart of Gold: Or a heart of evil. Or a heart of nothing. Or a heart of...gah, stupid Oryx.
    • Ren in the sequel.
  • How We Got Here: Snowman wakes up on a beach...
  • Killer Rabbit: The wolvogs. Look like friendly dogs, and when they are not ruthlessly killing other creatures, they act like friendly dogs.
    • They're designed to act like that, until you get close.
  • Literal Genie
  • May Contain Evil: BlyssPluss pills are marketed as the ultimate sex aid: they act as contraceptives, prevent the transmission of STDs and enhance sensation. Unfortunately some of the pills also contain an artificially created hemorrhagic Ebola-like virus that wipes out almost the entire human race.
  • Mega Corp: Several.
  • Murder.Com: It's the new internet porn.
  • My Death Is Just the Beginning
  • Names to Run Away From Really Fast: CorpSeCorps.
  • Nietzsche Wannabe: Crake, albeit somewhat silently. Apart from the ominous fridge magnets.
  • Retcon: In Oryx and Crake, the God's Gardeners are depicted as a loony, ineffective, fundamentalist Animal Wrongs Group. The Year of the Flood, however, depicts them far more sympathetically, and suggests that their previous characterization was just the public perception informed by CorpSeCorps propaganda and the actions of extremists.
  • Schmuck Bait
  • Self-Made Orphan: Implied with Crake
  • Twist Ending / The Untwist: Although it's being foreshadowed very explicitly all along, when the revelation comes, it still hits you like a punch in the gut and a kick in the nuts.
  • Unreliable Narrator: Oryx. Everytime Jimmy presses her for her history, her story changes - in the end, Jimmy suspects that she invents her past to humour him.
  • What Do You Mean, It's Not Symbolic?: Lots.
  • Xtreme Kool Letterz: A number of companies in the story use these, along with Wiki Words.
  • Word of God: Atwood says that Crake AKA Glenn is based exactly on Canadian pianist Glenn Gould and has Asperger's Syndrome.