
“The reason I resist closed boxes is that nature does not deal in closed boxes.”
— Margaret Atwood
Margaret Atwood (@margaretatwood) is the author of more than 50 books of fiction, poetry, critical essays, and graphic novels. Dearly, her first collection of poetry in over a decade, was published November 2020. Her latest novel, The Testaments, is a co-winner of the 2019 Booker Prize. It is the long-awaited sequel to The Handmaid’s Tale, now an award-winning TV series. Her other works of fiction include Cat’s Eye, finalist for the 1989 Booker Prize; Alias Grace, which won the Giller Prize in Canada and the Premio Mondello in Italy; The Blind Assassin, winner of the 2000 Booker Prize; The MaddAddam Trilogy; and Hag-Seed: William Shakespeare’s The Tempest Retold.
Margaret’s work has been published in more than 45 countries and she is the recipient of numerous awards, including the Peace Prize of the German Book Trade, the Franz Kafka International Literary Prize, the PEN Center USA Lifetime Achievement Award, and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize Innovator’s Award.
Burning Questions, a collection of essays from 2004–2021 will be published in March of this year. “Practical Utopias: An Exploration of the Possible,” an 8-week live online learning experience, will run later this year.
Please enjoy!
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#573: Margaret Atwood — A Living Legend on Creative Process, The Handmaid’s Tale, Being a Mercenary Child, Resisting Labels, the Poet Rug Exchange, Liminal Beings, Burning Questions, Practical Utopias, and More
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What was your favorite quote or lesson from this episode? Please let me know in the comments.
SCROLL BELOW FOR LINKS AND SHOW NOTES…
Want to hear an episode about an author who, according to Margaret Atwood, is more prolific than old? Listen to my conversation with Joyce Carol Oates in which we discuss the most important “writerly” quality, overcoming obstacles to creativity, how to know when a final draft is ready to release into the world, and much more.
#497: Joyce Carol Oates — A Writing Icon on Creative Process and Creative Living
SELECTED LINKS FROM THE EPISODE
- Connect with Margaret Atwood:
- Burning Questions: Essays and Occasional Pieces, 2004 to 2021 by Margaret Atwood | Amazon
- Margaret Atwood: Practical Utopias | DISCO
- Dearly: New Poems by Margaret Atwood | Amazon
- The Testaments: A Novel by Margaret Atwood | Amazon
- The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood | Amazon
- Cat’s Eye by Margaret Atwood | Amazon
- Alias Grace: A Novel by Margaret Atwood | Amazon
- The Blind Assassin: A Novel by Margaret Atwood | Amazon
- The MaddAddam Trilogy by Margaret Atwood | Amazon
- Hag-Seed: William Shakespeare’s The Tempest Retold: A Novel by Margaret Atwood | Amazon
- Second Words: Selected Critical Prose by Margaret Atwood | Amazon
- Moving Targets: Writing with Intent 1982-2004 by Margaret Atwood | Amazon
- How I Write: Margaret Atwood | The Daily Beast
- Cursive Seemed to Go the Way of Quills and Parchment. Now It’s Coming Back. | The New York Times
- The Iliad Paperback by Homer | Amazon
- The Odyssey by Homer | Amazon
- Alias Grace | Netflix
- An Idea That Stuck: How George de Mestral Invented the Velcro Fastener | Velcro
- What Is the Meaning behind Certain Hand Signs in Old Paintings? | r/ArtHistory
- The Waste Land by T.S. Eliot | Poetry Foundation
- Madame Sosostris’ Tarot Reading in T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land | Crossroads Tarot
- Who Knows? Bosch Knows. The Garden of Earthly Delights Zoomed in | Arthive
- Hieronymus Bosch: An Investigation of His Underdrawings by Jetske A. Sybesma | Google Books
- A Comprehensive Guide to Rising Signs and What They Actually Mean | Allure
- Trickster Makes This World: Mischief, Myth, and Art by Lewis Hyde | Amazon
- The Gift: Creativity and the Artist in the Modern World by Lewis Hyde | Amazon
- Earthsea Cycle Set by Ursula K. Le Guin | Amazon
- A Game of Thrones Series by George R.R. Martin | Amazon
- The Great Dragon Facts Guide To Western And Eastern Dragons | Only Dinosaurs
- 1984 (1950 Edition) by George Orwell | Bookfellows Fine Books
- Margaret Atwood on Ray Bradbury: The Tale-Teller Who Tapped into the Gothic Core of America | The Guardian
- Celebrating Ray Bradbury at San Diego Comic-Con With Shadow Show | Bookreporter.com
- John DeMont: Has Rural Nova Scotia’s Time Finally Come? | Saltwire
- Princess Line: Fashion A-Z | BoF Education
- Margaret Atwood: Under the Thumb | Utne Reader
- Margaret Atwood: The Pleasure of Reading | Antiserious
- Idiot’s Guides | Penguin Random House
- Behind the Bohemian Embassy Publicity Packet | Moose Creek Productions
- Edward Lloyd and his Coffee House | Lloyd’s Register
- Sir George Williams Campus | Concordia University
- Moby Dick by Herman Melville | Amazon
- Middlemarch by George Eliot | Amazon
- The Future of Life by Edward O. Wilson | Amazon
- Order Hymenoptera | BugGuide.Net
- The Homer of the Ants by Margaret Atwood | The New York Review of Books
- “On Being a Woman Writer”: Atwood’s Canadian and Feminist Contexts by Heidi Slettedahl Macpherson | Salem Press
- Platypus | The Australian Museum
- Dracula: Unabridged and Fully Illustrated by Bram Stoker | Amazon
- Frankenstein by Mary Shelley | Amazon
- The War of the Worlds by H.G. Wells | Amazon
- Utopia by Thomas More | Amazon
- Vertical Farming for the Future | USDA
- One Day, Your Home Could Be Made with Mushrooms | The Verge
- This ‘Living Coffin’ Is Made of Mushroom Fiber | Reuters
- Gaia 3D Printed Earth House with Crane WASP | WASP Team
- Checking the Claim: A House That Produces More Energy Than It Consumes | Smithsonian Magazine
- Of the Three Main Revolutions, American, French or Russian, Which Was the Most Significant? | Quora
- The World Turned Upside Down: A History of the Chinese Cultural Revolution by Jisheng Yang | Amazon
- Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy by John le Carré | Amazon
- Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy: 40 Years On, the Labyrinthine Thriller Is Still TV Caviar | The Guardian
- The Lives Of Others | Prime Video
- Enemies Everywhere: Photos Show Absurdity of Life under the Stasi | The Guardian
- Margaret Atwood Teaches Creative Writing | MasterClass
- Ecological Death Care | Recompose
- The 100-Mile Diet: A Year of Local Eating by Alisa Smith and J.B. MacKinnon | Amazon
- Ursula K. Le Guin by Margaret Atwood: ‘One of the Literary Greats of the 20th Century’ | The Guardian
- Margaret Atwood: We Lost Ursula Le Guin When We Needed Her Most | The Washington Post
- Cuban Missile Crisis | JFK Library
- Textile Produced from Algae | Sustainable Fashion
- The Future of Ocean Farming | Modern Farmer
- GreenWave
- In the Dark | Netflix
- Wait Until Dark | Prime Video
- The Country of the Blind by H.G. Wells | Amazon
- Time Enough at Last | The Twilight Zone, Pluto TV
- NFTs: Blockchain-Powered Art, Trading Cards, Music, and More with Aftab Hossain | Modern Finance
- A Blockchain Designed to Evolve | Tezos
- Hic Et Nunc (HEN)
- Margaret Atwood Unveils the LongPen | The Today Show
- Compliant Virtual Signing & Wet Ink Signatures | Syngrafii
- The ‘Hallelujah Moment’ behind the Invention of the Post-it Note | CNN Business
- Richard III by William Shakespeare | Amazon
- The 4-Hour Chef: The Simple Path to Cooking Like a Pro, Learning Anything, and Living the Good Life by Timothy Ferriss | Amazon
- Philip Guedalla on the Work of Henry James | Wikiwand
- Winter Outdoor Activities: What is ‘Skinning’? | Hike it Baby
- Arctic Dreams by Barry Lopez | Amazon
- Of Wolves and Men by Barry Lopez | Amazon
SHOW NOTES
Note from the editor: Timestamps will be added shortly.
- When jumping into a new writing project, does Margaret know if it’s going to be expressed as poetry or prose? From her perspective, is there a difference in where they originate? How do these two sometimes act in synergy?
- How does Margaret maintain her vital life energy at 82 years young?
- In what way does astrology — particularly Gemini rising — explain Margaret’s tendency to “stick [her] nose into things?”
- The Gift vs. Trickster Makes This World.
- What drives Margaret’s ability to craft engaging speculative fiction?
- What are the downsides of raising a family in the woods, blissfully isolated from the world? Margaret shares a glimpse into her own childhood.
- How crossing a football field in a pink princess line dress nudged Margaret toward writing poetry for the first time.
- How the limited number of career options from which a young woman was expected to choose guided Margaret toward her current profession — and how long it took to start paying off.
- What benefit did Margaret get from writing during the time before she started being paid to do so?
- As someone who’s often found herself in the teaching profession, what type of teaching has Margaret enjoyed most?
- Why Margaret considers The Future of Life by Edward O. Wilson to be required reading for young adults.
- Why Margaret resists the act of labeling that humans tend toward.
- What explains Margaret’s ongoing interest in dystopian — as well as utopian — literature, and what can people expect from “Practical Utopias: An Exploration of the Possible,” her eight-week online learning experience?
- Comparing and contrasting major revolutions and political upheavals of recent centuries, and what Margaret learned by visiting Eastern Bloc countries during the Cold War.
- How is the DISCO online learning platform that will host “Practical Utopias: An Exploration of the Possible” different from other such platforms, and what kind of problems will participants be solving?
- What readers can expect from Burning Questions.
- How has Margaret’s writing process changed over the course of her life? What does it look like these days?
- A tangent about shows we binge when our writing quotas for the day are fulfilled, an H.G. Wells story about perspective, and a Twilight Zone episode that (surprise!) doesn’t end well for its protagonist.
- Tezos NFTs, illustrated utopias, and inventions fitting unexpected functions.
- A spoiler alert for anyone who hasn’t yet read The Testaments and doesn’t want to know what happens to a character from The Handmaid’s Tale: skip ahead about 30 seconds!
- Does Margaret do research for her characters?
- Margaret turns the tables and asks me what prompted my podcasting endeavors.
- Dictation apps, the three Henry Jameses, and confessional stenographers.
- Undertaking winter adventures at high elevations and other parting thoughts.
MORE GUEST QUOTES FROM THE INTERVIEW
“You bring to any book who you already are and the age that you are and the experience that you’ve had, and it’s the same for everyone.”
— Margaret Atwood
“The reason I resist closed boxes is that nature does not deal in closed boxes.”
— Margaret Atwood
“There I was in my pink princess line dress crossing the football field, and a poem occurred to me. It wasn’t very good poem, but it was a poem. I was very excited about it. And this is how these things start. You write some pretty terrible poetry that you’re very excited about, and luckily there’s nobody there to tell you, ‘This is really terrible poetry,’ and then you go on from there.”
— Margaret Atwood
“I was going to be a botanist because I was actually quite good at it. But then along came this writing, much to my parents’ dismay. But being the bite your tongue kind of parents, I think they just hoped it would be a phase that I would grow out of.”
— Margaret Atwood
“Writers make stuff up. You ask them questions that essentially have no answers, but they make stuff up anyway. I’ll tell you what I made up, but it is kind of true.”
— Margaret Atwood
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