Margaret's moment: Age is an advantage, says Atwood - Action News
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Entertainment

Margaret's moment: Age is an advantage, says Atwood

From new graphic novels to books turned television shows, it all seems to be happening at once for beloved Canadian writer Margaret Atwood.

'Things aligned in a way that had nothing to do with me planning them,' says the author

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It's all coming together at once for Margaret Atwood.

Two of her booksare making their televisiondebuts this week The Handmaid's Tale on Bravo and Huluand WanderingWenda, a show based on heralliterativechildren'sbooks, starts Saturday on CBC.Another show based on an Atwood novel,Alias Grace,is under production and coming to the public broadcaster later this year.

The third volume of her graphic novel series Angel Catbirdis due out this summer and MGM has snapped up the television rights for her 2015 bookThe Heart Goes Last.She's evengot cameos in Alias Grace and TheHandmaid's Tale, where she slaps starElisabeth Moss in the face.

It's a career's worth ofaccomplishments, all happening now atage 77. But the Canadian author saidthat'smere coincidence.

"Things aligned in a way that had nothing to do with me planning them," she told CBC News. "It is not the life of a typical novelist, except the occasional typical novelist will have something like this occur."

Writer Margaret Atwood turned 77 not too long ago, but is happy to be 'remarkably spry for her age.' Adaptations of several of her books are hitting the small screen. (Chris Young/Canadian Press)

And she's not shy about how old she is: she credits her age with what drives her to try out so many different things.

"I didn't grow up in a world where people were telling you not to do these things, because they wouldn't imagine that you would do them anyway," she said.

"When Isaid, 'I'm going to be a writer,' nobody said, 'You can't be a writer because you're a girl.'They just said, 'You want to be what?' And they would have said that to any gender of person. It was just an unknown thing to be."

Atwood a literary 'titan'

Canadian science-fiction writer Cory Doctorow, who is now based in Burbank, Calif., is "an enormous fan" of Atwood's work, drawing inspiration from it for his own writing. He callscertain literary techniques "Atwoodian."

"If I think about where a story might go, I think to myself, 'What would Peggy do?'"

Doctorow travels the worldand has seen Atwood'sglobal influenceamongfellow writers. He calls her a "titan through the English-speaking world."

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Doctorow and Atwood havebeen on a panel together and havehad one-on-one conversationsandthe odd exchange on Twitter.(Atwoodis an activeTwitter user she likens it to hosting her own radio show.)

But he said her current fameshouldn't come as a surprise to anyone nor should the renewed relevanceof the fictionaldystopian future she wrote about inThe Handmaid's Talein 1985.

"Instead of predicting her future, she predicted her present, which didn't go away," he said.

"The world has caught up with something that somebody has been doing all their life."

'She has always been herself'

It's a boon forauthorswhen theirbooks get adapted to television,saidDoctorow, who used to work at a Toronto science-fiction bookstore (now calledBakkaPhoenix Books).

"TV is a gateway drug to reading for a lot of people," he said. "That's true with even bad adaptations an amazing opportunity for those writers to discover new audiences."

Even though Atwood has long beena household name, interest in her books is surging. All of the Toronto Public Library system's copies are out at the moment.Chris Szego, who managesBakka Phoenix, said she's seen a spike in sales ofAtwood'sbooks.

"Her reach is so wide," she said. "She has always been herself. We talk a lot in Canadian literature circles about the search for authenticity and she always has been."

There's not much sign of slowing downfor Atwood as she nears her 80s.

"I'm getting at this point in my life[where I'm] 'remarkably spry for her age.'So I'd rather have that than 'remarkably decrepit for her age,'" she said. "I am the age I am and that gives you a certain advantage too, because I remember a lot of things."

Atwood makes a cameo appearance in The Handmaid's Tale, delivering a slap to the face of lead actress Elisabeth Moss. (George Kraychyk/Hulu)

With files from Eli Glasner and Nigel Hunt