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Radio 4,07 Dec 2025,57 mins

Margaret Atwood, writer

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Margaret Atwood is a Canadian writer. She has published more than sixty books spanning novels, poetry, short stories, non-fiction, children鈥檚 literature, and graphic novels, and has been called 鈥渙ne of the sharpest and most imaginative novelists writing in English鈥. She is one of only four writers to have won the Booker Prize twice: for The Blind Assassin in 2000 and for her 2019 follow-up to The Handmaid鈥檚 Tale, The Testaments. Margaret was born in Ottawa in November 1939, shortly after the outbreak of World War II, the second of three children to Carl Atwood, an entomologist. During her early life, she would spend the warmer months in the remote forests of northern Quebec and Ontario where her father tracked insect infestations, and the winters in the city (first Ottawa, later Toronto). She didn鈥檛 attend school for a full year until the age of twelve. Her childhood scribblings 鈥 a 鈥渘ovel鈥 about an ant called Annie, a volume of rhyming poems about cats, and a play about a giant 鈥 turned into a more serious ambition to become a writer when Margaret was sixteen. After studying English at the University of Toronto, where she began publishing poems in the college magazine, her first novel, The Edible Woman, came out in 1969, following five collections of poetry. Her most famous work, The Handmaid鈥檚 Tale, was published in 1985 and depicted a dystopian vision of the United States as a patriarchal and totalitarian place called Gilead. Although it was written during the Reagan era, it has become eerily relevant again in the wake of the election of Donald Trump. Margaret lost her life partner, the writer Graeme Gibson, in 2019. She lives in Toronto. Presenter: Lauren Laverne Producer: Sarah Taylor

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