Margaret Atwood
Margaret Atwood is a renowned Canadian novelist, poet, essayist, and environmental activist, best known for her dystopian novel *The Handmaid's Tale* (1985), which explores themes of feminism, authoritarianism, and women's rights. Born in Ottawa in 1939, she grew up in northern Ontario and Quebec, studied at the University of Toronto and Radcliffe College, and has authored over fifty books including poetry, fiction, and nonfiction. Her works have earned her numerous awards, such as two Booker Prizes for *The Blind Assassin* (2000) and *The Testaments* (2019), and have been widely adapted for film and television.
Fiction
Poetry
Dystopian
Feminist
Stone Mattress: Nine Tales
The Penelopiad (Canongate Myths)
Surfacing
The Robber Bride
Cat's Eye
The Blind Assassin: A Novel
The Heart Goes Last: A Novel
Alias Grace: A Novel
Stone Mattress: Nine Tales
MaddAddam: A Novel
MaddAddam: A Novel
Cat's Eye
Cat's Eye
Payback: Debt and the Shadow Side of Wealth
The Year of the Flood: A Novel
The Edible Woman
From Eve to Dawn, A History of Women in the World, Volume III: Infernos and Paradises, The Triumph of Capitalism in the 19th Century
The Door
Surfacing
The Heart Goes Last: A Novel
The Heart Goes Last: A Novel
Wilderness Tips
Moral Disorder and Other Stories
The Handmaid's Tale