Margaret Atwood
b. 1939
About Margaret Atwood
Margaret Atwood (born 1939) is a Canadian novelist, poet, and critic widely regarded as one of the most important living authors in the English language. Born in Ottawa and raised partly in the northern Ontario wilderness, she studied at Victoria University and Radcliffe College. Her breakthrough novel *The Edible Woman* (1969) announced her feminist preoccupations; *The Handmaid's Tale* (1985) — a dystopian novel about a theocratic patriarchy — became her most internationally known work, reinvigorated by the 2017 Hulu adaptation during the Trump era.
She has won the Booker Prize twice — for *The Blind Assassin* (2000) and *The Testaments* (2019). She has published more than 50 works of fiction, poetry, and criticism, and remains an outspoken public voice on environmental collapse, authoritarianism, and gender politics.
“War is what happens when language fails.”
Quick Facts
- Born
- 1939
- Age
- 87 years
- Domain
- inspiration
- Quotes
- 5 collected
- Key Themes
- ConflictResilienceLegacyWordsChange
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Wikipedia — Margaret AtwoodMargaret Atwood's Famous Quotes
5 quotes
“War is what happens when language fails.”
— Negotiating with the Dead: A Writer on Writing (2002)
“Don't let the bastards grind you down.”
— The Handmaid's Tale (1985) — mock-Latin "Nolite te bastardes carborundorum"
“In the end, we'll all become stories.”
— Various interviews; this formulation widely attributed from the 1980s onward
“A word after a word after a word is power.”
— "Spelling" poem from True Stories (1981)
“Nothing changes instantaneously: in a gradually heating bathtub, you'd be boiled to death before you knew it.”
— The Handmaid's Tale (1985)
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Frequently Asked Questions
Margaret Atwood (born 1939) is a Canadian novelist, poet, and critic widely regarded as one of the most important living authors in the English language. Born in Ottawa and raised partly in the northern Ontario wilderness, she studied at Victoria University and Radcliffe College. Her breakthrough novel *The Edible Woman* (1969) announced her feminist preoccupations; *The Handmaid's Tale* (1985) — a dystopian novel about a theocratic patriarchy — became her most internationally known work, reinvigorated by the 2017 Hulu adaptation during the Trump era. She has won the Booker Prize twice — for *The Blind Assassin* (2000) and *The Testaments* (2019). She has published more than 50 works of fiction, poetry, and criticism, and remains an outspoken public voice on environmental collapse, authoritarianism, and gender politics. Margaret Atwood lived b. 1939.