Atwood, Margaret Eleanor
Related Category: English Canadian Literature: Biographies
1939, Canadian novelist and poet. Her writing treats contemporary issues, such as feminism, sexual politics, the fate of Canada and Canadian literature, and the intrusive nature of mass society. Her best-known novel,
The Handmaid's Tale (1986), is set in a mid-21st-century American dystopia ruled by religious extremists. Atwood is a skilled and powerful storyteller whose novels have sometimes made use of such popular genres as the historical novel, detective tale, and science fiction. Among her other works are novels such as
The Edible Woman (1969),
Surfacing (1972),
Bodily Harm (1981),
The Robber Bride (1993),
Alias Grace (1996),
The Blind Assassin (2000; Booker Prize),
Oryx and Crake (2003), and
The Penelopiad (2005). Her short-story collections include
Dancing Girls (1983),
Bluebeard's Eggs (1993), and
Moral Disorder (2006). She has also written several volumes of poetry, including
The Circle Game (1965),
Power Politics (1970), and
True Stories (1981), and numerous essays.
See interviews in E. G. Ingersoll, ed., Margaret Atwood: Conversations (1990) and V.-L. Beaulieu, ed., Two Solicitudes: Conversations (1998); biography by N. Cooke (1998); studies by A. E. and C. N. Davidson, ed. (1981), S. E. Grace and L. Weir (1983), F. Davey (1984), J. Mallinson (1984), J. H. Rosenberg (1984), B. H. Rigney (1987), J. McCombs, ed. (1988), K. VanSpanckeren and J. G. Castro, ed. (1988), S. Hengen (1993), E. Rao (1993), S. R. Wilson (1993), C. Nicholson, ed. (1994), C. A. Howells (1996), L. M. York, ed. (1994), K. F. Stein (1999), H. Bloom, ed. (2000), R. M. Nischik, ed. (2000), P. Cuder (2003), C. Tennant (2003), and S. R. Wilson (2003).