The year’s best titles, according to our books editor, range from Margaret Atwood’s latest to a study of Jack the Ripper’s victims
Tag Archives: Margaret Atwood
Margaret Atwood’s urgent new tale of Gilead
In her much-anticipated sequel to The Handmaid’s Tale, the renowned author takes her anti-woman dystopia to the age of Trump
How Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale became a vivid graphic novel
While creating her version of the story, Vancouver artist Renee Nault had a series of conversations with the renowned author
Margaret Atwood on the stark differences ‘back home’ before and after the Great War
Although nothing was shelled or destroyed, everything changed on the home front
Steven Galloway wins $167,000 decision against UBC over harm to his reputation
‘It was a painful, wrenching shock’: The award-winning author speaks about being shunned by colleagues and fired by the university even though accusations of sexual assault against him were not substantiated
Sarah Polley: Now is not a time for women to keep quiet
The driving force behind a small-screen adaptation of Atwood’s novel Alias Grace on the mystery of Grace Marks and Canadian TV’s diversity problem
Margaret Atwood: How technology is reviving old styles of storytelling
As Amazon’s giant audio division Audible launches in Canada, Atwood explains her involvement, and what it means for storytelling in this country
How CanLit was born
Brave publishers, great books and Canada’s newfound affluence combined to set the scene for the CanLit explosion of the late ’60s
For black women, The Handmaid’s Tale’s dystopia is real—and telling
The way people are talking about The Handmaid’s Tale—Hulu’s buzzy TV series—reveals the limits of popular feminism
Margaret Atwood on the author Gabrielle Roy, in nine parts
In an excerpt from ‘Quebec,’ Margaret Atwood considers the life and legacy of a deeply Canadian author who still resonates today