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Tim Ferriss · 2022-02-23 · 1h 41m

Margaret Atwood — A Living Legend on Creative Process, The Handmaid’s Tale, and More

Margaret Atwood talks creative process, poetry vs. prose, dystopias, and her practical-Utopias project with Tim Ferriss.

Margaret Atwood — A Living Legend on Creative Process, The Handmaid’s Tale, and More
The guest

Margaret Atwood — Canadian author of The Handmaid's Tale, The Testaments, and Alias Grace, plus dozens of novels, poetry collections, and essay books. At 82 she is also an inventor (the LongPen signing technology) and runs an online learning program called Practical Utopias.

The gist

Tim Ferriss interviews legendary author Margaret Atwood about how she writes without outlining, the different mental origins of poetry versus prose, and how a single character can travel across decades through poem, TV play, and novel. She discusses growing up in the northern Canadian woods with no electricity, her early career when writers in Canada couldn't expect to make a living, and the coffee-house subculture that birthed today's literary festivals. Atwood explains her resistance to labels and closed boxes, her interest in dystopian and utopian fiction, and the design of her Practical Utopias course about building green, scalable, affordable ways to live. She also covers the writing of Aunt Lydia in The Testaments, research from the 'junk shop' of her brain, and a wide-ranging riff on astrology, Hermes, and curiosity.

Big reveals

  • Atwood writes poetry in cursive on the fly, while novels are '10% inspiration and 90% perspiration' — disciplined work she sits down to do like a job.
  • The story of Grace Marks started as a poem, became a black-and-white TV play, then the novel Alias Grace, then a Netflix miniseries by Sarah Polley who first wrote to Atwood at age 17.
  • Atwood traces her start as a writer to crossing a high-school football field in a pink princess-line dress when a poem 'occurred' to her, described as a 'large invisible thumb' descending from the sky.
  • She wrote for 16 years before making a living at it; in 1950s Canada there were essentially no literary agents and publishers thought there was no market for Canadian books.
  • Practical Utopias is an 8-week online live learning experience on the Disco platform where participants 'world-build' green, scalable, affordable ways to live.
  • Aunt Lydia evolved rather than being planned as a double agent — she was a secondary character in The Handmaid's Tale who became a primary, more complex voice in The Testaments 15-16 years later in the story's timeline.
  • For Practical Utopias they chose Tezos NFTs because they consume about as much energy as a tweet, far less than typical NFTs, to illustrate the participants' utopias.
  • Atwood invented LongPen, a biometric remote signing technology, holding patents because she started so early; it has since pivoted into a business tool called Syngrafii.

Things worth remembering

  • Velcro was invented before anyone knew what it was for — Atwood cites it as an example of technologies finding unexpected purposes.
  • A Dutch neighbor, Yeta Sisman, taught Atwood astrology and palmistry during long cold Edmonton winters in 1969 while writing a thesis arguing Hieronymus Bosch's figures were astrological symbols.
  • Atwood's parents were so rural in Nova Scotia they didn't get electricity until the late 1950s, and she saw a 19th-century farm operating largely as it would have a century earlier.
  • Her father was a forest entomologist; the family went into the woods around April and returned in November because insects do little in winter, with transportation by boat since there were no roads.
  • Atwood wrote her first novel at age seven — about an ant — and notes its structural flaw: ants don't do anything until the final adult stage of their life cycle.
  • A 1952 guidance textbook listed only five careers for girls: nurse, secretary, schoolteacher, airline stewardess, and home economist; home economists made the most money.
  • Teaching the same course to 19-year-olds and returning adults, Atwood found that students who disliked Middlemarch (because the characters make wrong choices) were the ones the adults loved ('it's just like life').
  • E.O. Wilson, whose The Future of Life Atwood recommends, was an ant expert and her father a bee expert — both Hymenoptera — and she reviewed Wilson's only novel for the New York Review of Books.
  • Atwood cites futuristic ideas including mushroom coffins, 3D-printed compressed-earth houses built in two days, prefab homes that produce more energy than they consume, and fabric made from algae.
  • Late-career Henry James dictated his work to stenographers; Atwood discusses dictation software (Dragon) with Tim, recommended by Harvard Law professor Noah Feldman.

Recommended in this episode

Books, products and media the guest or host genuinely endorsed here — with the buy link.

Affiliate link — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

Guest’s ownBook

Alias Grace

Margaret Atwood (inferred)

“so I I wrote a novel called Alias Grace and then that gets turned into a Netflix miniseries by Sarah Polley” — Margaret Atwood 00:08:20
Find it on Amazon
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Trickster Makes This World

Lewis Hyde

“it made me think of a book that I really enjoyed called trickster makes this world great book I love I know the author” — Tim Ferriss 00:17:40
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The Future of Life

Edward O. Wilson

“you've recommended that young adults should read the future of Life by Edmund Osborne Wilson if the internet is to be believed” — Tim Ferriss 00:48:27
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The World Turned Upside Down

Yang Jisheng

“great book on the Chinese Cultural Revolution by a guy who was there what's the title the world turned upside down it's by Yang Jang” — Margaret Atwood 01:03:11
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Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy

BBC (inferred)

“it's a TV series starring of Alec Guinness which is very good at it too from about the 70s early 70s” — Margaret Atwood 01:04:44
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RecommendedMedia

The Lives of Others

Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck (inferred)

“one of my favorite films actually certainly for a long period of time called the lives of others fantastic film exactly” — Tim Ferriss 01:04:44
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Guest’s ownBook

The Handmaid's Tale

Margaret Atwood (inferred)

“when you wrote the handmaid stale decades ago did you plan Aunt Lydia's role as a double agent which the rest of us didn't find out until the Testaments” — Tim Ferriss 01:26:47
Find it on Amazon
Guest’s ownBook

The Testaments

Margaret Atwood (inferred)

“so the Testaments is approx 15 16 years after the handmaid's taale things have happened to Aunt Lydia since that time” — Margaret Atwood 01:27:48
Find it on Amazon
Guest’s ownBook

Burning Questions

Margaret Atwood (inferred)

“you also have burning questions yes collection of essays from 2004 to 2021 which will be published in March of 2022” — Tim Ferriss 00:58:58
Find it on Amazon
Guest’s ownBook

Second Words

Margaret Atwood (inferred)

“the origin one was called second words because it was mostly book reviews did a lot of book reviews at that time” — Margaret Atwood 01:08:58
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Guest’s ownBook

Moving Targets

Margaret Atwood (inferred)

“the second one was called moving targets and that took us up to 2004 and then we have burning questions” — Margaret Atwood 01:08:58
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Guest’s ownBook

Angel Catbird

Margaret Atwood (inferred)

“I did what is essentially a bird conservation project called Angel Catbird with a wonderful graphic artist called Johnny Christmas” — Margaret Atwood 01:21:26
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RecommendedBook

Arctic Dreams

Barry Lopez

“I'm reading a book right now called Arctic Dreams by Barry Lopez he was a friend oh he was” — Tim Ferriss 01:37:44
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Of Wolves and Men

Barry Lopez

“I had been gifted of wolves and men and it absolutely blew my mind great it was such a beautifully written meticulously researched book” — Tim Ferriss 01:38:16
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