Inside the book, her former name is never mentioned. Thanks to a "clue" in the novel given by Atwood, it’s okay for readers to call Offred, June as her real name if they like to. This Handmaid recounts her story, and demonstrates to us her past through flashbacks, and digressions. She is a women of intelligent, insightful, perceptive, keen and kind. She owns enough blames and mistakes to form her human again, however, not like a large amount that she turns into an unsympathetic character. …show more content…
Like almost all of the Handmaids in Gilead, she is a common lady who is being appointed to an uncommon circumstance.
Offred isn’t really a legend. In spite of the fact that she withstands Gilead inwardly, once her endeavor at escape does not work out, she submits externally. This lady is not really a women’s activist champion. Her pre-Gilead relationship started to fade out once she became a mistress, meeting her commander, the officer who she had been appointed to serve, in secret hotels for illegal