
NPR's Book of the Day Margaret Atwood on what finally made her agree to write a memoir
Nov 17, 2025
Bestselling author Margaret Atwood, known for The Handmaid's Tale, discusses her new memoir, Book of Lives. She reflects on her initial reluctance to write a memoir, redefining it as a collection of life's quirks and near-misses. Atwood explores how her Canadian identity shapes her worldview and influences her writing. She shares insights on childhood bullying that inspired her novels and her collaborative work with late partner Graham Gibson. The conversation captures the evolution of literature in Canada and the contemporary relevance of dystopian themes.
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What A Memoir Really Is
- Margaret Atwood defines a memoir as what you remember: the vivid, odd, and often dramatic moments of life.
- She chose to write because memoir allowed her to focus on near-death events, catastrophes, and surprising highlights rather than daily desk work.
Revisiting Old Writings Felt Haunting
- Atwood reread unpublished writings and said the process gave her strange dreams and conversations with the dead.
- She also used sensitivity readers, including her sister and daughter, to flag things she "can't say."
Death Changes What You Can Say
- Atwood notes that once people die, writers can say things they might not say earlier for fear of hurting feelings or libel suits.
- That reality shaped how she approached naming and describing people in her memoir.






