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The Carhullan Army [Paperback]

Sarah Hall
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)
RRP: £7.99
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Book Description

3 April 2008

Set in the part of England once known as The Lake District and frequented by hordes of landscape hungry tourists, The Carhullan Army is narrated by a young woman who has adopted the name Sister.

Britain after its union with the United States and numerous unsuccessful foreign wars, has found itself in the grip of a severe fuel crisis and the country is now under the control of a severe body known as The AUthority. All fire-arms have been handed over to the Government and all women have been fitted with contraceptive devices; this Britain of the near-future is brutal and very-near desperate.

Sister's only hope -- or so she thinks -- lies in finding the Carhullan Army: a mythical band of women who lives a communal existence in the remote hills of Cumbria.

A Handmaid's Tale for our times, Sarah Hall's novella is about women, terrorism, and individual choice. As compelling as it is believeable, The Carhullan Army represents yet another stage in her development as one of Britain's most original and relevant story tellers.


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Product details

  • Paperback: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Faber and Faber; First Paperback Edition, First Printing edition (3 April 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 057123660X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0571236602
  • Product Dimensions: 1.5 x 12.6 x 19.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 80,202 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Review

'Hall's award-winning third novel has shades of Orwell and The Handmaid's Tale but is entirely modern and brutally fresh. -- Independent

'In prose as stark and lyrical as the Cumbrian landscape, Hall picks apart notions of absolutism, individuality and moral responsibility.' -- Observer

'When Hall writes scenes rather than synopsis, the personal drama ensures the political gravity becomes genuinely gripping.' -- Guardian

Book Description

"If we had stood together on the shoreline two thousand years before, facing the invading ships with fire in our hands and screaming for them to come, they would have called us Furies, and they would have been afraid."

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
25 of 25 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars You need to read this book! 25 Feb 2009
Format:Paperback
To be honest I wasn't expecting much here. I thought I knew Sarah Hall's work from the articles she writes for the glossy magazines that grace Cumbrian dentists' waiting-rooms. I recall in particular a tremulous piece about her plans to climb Striding Edge on Helvellyn - a deeply girly account I thought. I haven't read her other novels - Haweswater and Electric Michelangelo. So I must have been in a good mood when I was persuaded to buy Carhullan Army.

But what a splendid decision. How she's grown! Fellow book-fiends, I am prepared to eat my own walking boots in atonement.

OK, it's not perfect. The literary device - a supposed collection of prison interrogation records felt unrealistic and the tale got off to a clunky start with a number of improbable developments. It didn't help that I know the geographical area in which she sets her tale. Carhullan actually exists! I do my shopping in "Rith" so I know, for example, that you don't have to cross the Eden to get from the one to the other.

Enough of this carping. Once the story gets into its stride it's unstoppable and the writing is superb. I learnt quite a few new words and had my eyes opened in various ways. From the very beginning of course, you know that you're dealing with a tragedy - that there will not be a happy ending. But you are pulled on regardless. The psychological insight is spot-on and the characterisation is superb. Wherever did Jacky come from, I wonder? I see that other reviewers feel that Sarah just ran out of steam at the end. Nonsense, say I. The increasingly fragmentary interrogation record simply underlines the fragmentation of the lives of the protagonists. In the end we know that our Amazonian heroine will not survive but there is no sense of despair. Re-reading the opening lines of the book I realised that there is a coded message. This is a deeply noble tale of commitment and hope. We've rather lost the knack of this lately and Sarah's book is a timely reminder.

Somebody else suggested Carhullan would make a good film. I couldn't agree more.
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21 of 22 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Thought Provoking but Flawed 9 April 2008
By Quicksilver TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
Strangely, I find myself in agreement with parts of nearly all the previous reviews here.

First the good points. Sarah Hall's writing is excellent and this novel is highly readable. On the opening page she uses the delightful phrase 'It was a wet rotting October' and this type of evocative language is used right through to the novel's very last words. The narrator slowly drip feeds the reader with snippets of backstory that cover the collapse of the United Kingdom and the genesis of the 'Authority'. This is very well done and Hall makes a breakdown of this magnitude seem scarily plausible. For me, these sections form the strongest part of the novel and should be compulsory reading for anybody considering working for the Ministry of Justice.

I have to come clean and admit that I'm a man and concede that perhaps I'm not the target audience for this novel but for me, the sections dealing with the all-women commune, didn't really stack up. These parts felt derivative and rehashed from countless other (superior) dystopian visions. This novel inevitably invites comparison with Margaret Atwood's "Handmaid's Tail" but this is like comparing the Marx Brothers with the Chuckle Brothers; the Carhullan Army just doesn't come close.

The lesbain love scenes, although sensitively handled were all too predictable and added little to the story. The central question posed by the novelis, 'Will women become as violent as men if they have to?' but Hall's attempts to answer it feel clumsy and contrived. One thing that is exemplified well, is that no matter what ones intentions, absolute power does indeed corrupt absolutely.

The novel does rather collapse in on itself as it reaches the final pages and the ambiguity of the ending isn't very satisfactory but Hall's excellent prose pulls the reader along at a breakneck speed. In all I'm not sure that novel achieves what the author intended but it is an enjoyable read. I haven't stopped thinking about the Carhullan Army since finishing it, which is a strong positive for this flawed but powerful novel.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars torn opinion 13 Jan 2008
Format:Hardcover
I have to say, I'm not entirely sold on Hall's novel. This indepth narrative of one woman's determination to fight back against the injustices of an oppressive government is certainly thought provking. The imagery of nature fighting back again containment is convincing - government control of human reproduction represents an attempt to control nature; whereas the women living at Carhullan are living off the land and allowing nature its rightful place in the world. Imagery found in the episode in Sister's father's garden shows how nature (i.e. the over-grown garden) is a protector, is the right path, by hiding the gun and ammunition from the Authority; her salvation, so to speak, is guarded by unadultered nature.
However, my main problem with the novel lies in it's conclusion. After the last piece of missing data it just ends. I sort of feels that Hall ran out of steam and couldn't be bothered finishing it properly. While, as a rule, I have no problem with ambiguous endings, and actually quite like puzzling over the question 'so, what happened next?', the connections were anything but seamless.

If you like nice neat bows to tie up your endings, this is not the one for you. But, if you like a thought provoking exploration of the ethical questions involved with retaliation of oppression then give it a go.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars Dystopian times, again.
This is a book rather difficult to like but one I enjoyed reading because well-written and atmospheric, if that makes sense. The beginning had me intrigued & hopeful. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Ann Fairweather
4.0 out of 5 stars Thought provoking.
Not normally the sort of book I would read but I really enjoyed it, I found it thought provoking as I suppose distopia could be a possibility if the world carries on hating itself.
Published 3 months ago by George Green
4.0 out of 5 stars A Good thriller but thats all
Very similar to Haweswater as its an easy to read thriller and reminds me of Hammond Innes! I get a bit frustrated that she uses the setting of the Lake District and i'm not sure... Read more
Published 7 months ago by Hannah
5.0 out of 5 stars Superb, taut, fast-paced
This is one of the most exciting novels I've read in a long time. The writing is superb, the story disturbing yet credible. Read more
Published 8 months ago by book lover
4.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful book - poor quality Kindle edition
Sarah Hall creates a dystopian vision of the near future, with sufficient clues and links back to our present day to make it entirely plausible. Read more
Published 11 months ago by Lokisma
4.0 out of 5 stars Great book-'A handmaid's tale'-esk
Great book-dystopian and disturbing in the same vein as 'AHandmaid's Tale' and ' 1984'. Ending disappointed me a
Little but whole concept plausible and as a result terrifying.
Published 22 months ago by Ms. Es Green
3.0 out of 5 stars Margaret Attwood's the Handmaid's Tale, meets Cormac McCarthy's The...
"Margaret Attwood's the Handmaid's Tale, meets Cormac McCarthy's The Road. In Cumbria." Well, that's what I reckoned The Carlhullan Army was trying to be like before I got stuck... Read more
Published on 8 April 2011 by Michael Taylor
5.0 out of 5 stars good book
This was a present for our daughter who thoroughly enjoyed it - I'm still waiting to read it myself! We both heard it discussed on Radio 4.
Published on 13 Jan 2011 by Flora Jane
4.0 out of 5 stars Same book different title
Loved the book as I knew I would after reading Haweswater by same author.
Trouble was I bought "The Carhullan Army" and "Daughters of the North" only to find they are the same... Read more
Published on 2 Jan 2011 by LizB
4.0 out of 5 stars If things get even a little bit worse
An unusual thriller that should appeal to women as much as men, The Carhullan Army is set in the future in a Britain that has lost its economic power completely and become a... Read more
Published on 3 Oct 2009 by Eileen Shaw
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