The Power by Naomi Alderman - review by Sarah A Smith

Sarah A Smith

She’s Electric

The Power

By

Penguin Books 341pp £8.99
 

The Power has already been wildly praised and was awarded this year’s Baileys Women’s Prize for Fiction. I have to concur with established opinion: Naomi Alderman has written an exhilaratingly intelligent book that is as funny as it is politically acute. I can’t think of another novel that is quite so thrilling a read (or, indeed, one that had me whooping with delight after just sixteen pages).

Alderman tells the story of the rise of a gynocracy, driven initially by the discovery that teenage girls can generate electricity within their bodies. This is a ‘power’ that is at first used in a playful, self-protective way against would-be lovers, and later for more sinister means, as the

Sign Up to our newsletter

Receive free articles, highlights from the archive, news, details of prizes, and much more.

Follow Literary Review on Twitter