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MaddAddam series
1 - Oryx And Crake (read by Campbell Scott)
2 - The Year Of The Flood (read by Bernadette Dunne, Katie MacNichol and Mark Bramhall)
3 - MaddAddam (read by Bernadette Dunne, Bob Walter and Robbie Daymond)
Other
4 - The Handmaid's Tale (read by Joanna David)
5 - The Handmaid's Tale (Michael O'Brien
6 - The Handmaid's Tale (Claire Danes
7 - The Blind Assassin (read by Margot Dionne)
8 - Alias Grace (read by Shelley Thompson)
9 - Cat's Eye (read by Barbara Caruso)
10 - The Robber Bride (read by Blythe Danner)
11 - The Penelopiad (read by Laural Merlington)
12 - The Edible Woman (read by Lorelei King)
13 - Surfacing (read by Laurel Lefkow)
14 - The Heart Goes Last (read by Cassandra Campbell and Mark Deakins)
15 - Stone Mattress (read by Margaret Atwood, Rob Delaney, Mark Bramhall, Bernadette Dunne, Arthur Morey, Emily Rankin and Lorna Raver)
16 - Lady Oracle (read by Lorelei King)
17 - Moral Disorder (read by Susan Denaker)
18 - Bluebeards Egg And Other Stories (read by Bonnie Hurren)
19 - Life Before Man (read by Lorelei King)
20 - In Other Worlds (read by Margaret Atwood and Susan Denaker)
21 - Academy Of American Poets - Margaret Atwood
22 - Hag-Seed
Margaret Eleanor Atwood, CC OOnt FRSC (born November 18, 1939) is a Canadian poet, novelist, literary critic, essayist, and environmental activist. She is among the most-honored authors of fiction in recent history. She is a winner of the Arthur C. Clarke Award and Prince of Asturias award for Literature, has been shortlisted for the Booker Prize five times, winning once, and has been a finalist for the Governor General's Award seven times, winning twice. She is also a founder of the Writers' Trust of Canada, a non-profit literary organization that seeks to encourage Canada's writing community.
While she is best known for her work as a novelist, she is also a poet, having published fifteen books of poetry to date. Many of her poems have been inspired by myths and fairy tales, which have been interests of hers from an early age. Atwood has published short stories in Tamarack Review, Alphabet, Harper's, CBC Anthology, Ms., Saturday Night, and many other magazines. She has also published four collections of stories and three collections of unclassifiable short prose works.
Born in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, Atwood is the second of three children of Margaret Dorothy (née Killam), a former dietitian and nutritionist, and Carl Edmund Atwood, an entomologist. Due to her father’s ongoing research in forest entomology, Atwood spent much of her childhood in the backwoods of Northern Quebec and traveling back and forth between Ottawa, Sault Ste. Marie, and Toronto. She did not attend school full-time until she was in eighth grade. She became a voracious reader of literature, Dell pocketbook mysteries, Grimm's Fairy Tales, Canadian animal stories, and comic books. She attended Leaside High School in Leaside, Toronto, and graduated in 1957.
Atwood began writing at the age of six and realized she wanted to write professionally when she was 16. In 1957, she began studying at Victoria College in the University of Toronto. Her professors included Jay Macpherson, and Northrop Frye. She graduated in 1961 with a Bachelor of Arts in English (honors) and a minor in philosophy and French.
In late 1961, after winning the E.J. Pratt Medal for her privately printed book of poems, Double Persephone, she began graduate studies at Harvard's Radcliffe College with a Woodrow Wilson fellowship. She obtained a master's degree (MA) from Radcliffe in 1962 and pursued further graduate studies at Harvard University for two years but never finished because she failed to complete her dissertation on “The English Metaphysical Romance." She has taught at the University of British Columbia (1965), Sir George Williams University in Montreal (1967–68), the University of Alberta (1969–70), York University in Toronto (1971–72), the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa (1985), where she was visiting M.F.A. Chair, and New York University, where she was Berg Professor of English.
In June 2011, Margaret Atwood was conferred with an honorary degree of Doctor of Literature (honoris causa) from the National University of Ireland, Galway .
In 1968, Atwood married Jim Polk; they were divorced in 1973. She formed a relationship with fellow novelist Graeme Gibson soon after and moved to a farm near Alliston, Ontario, north of Toronto, where their daughter Eleanor Jess Atwood Gibson was born in 1976. The family returned to Toronto in 1980.
The Economist called her a "scintillating wordsmith" and an "expert literary critic", but commented that her logic does not match her prose in Payback: Debt and the Shadow Side of Wealth, a book which commences with the conception of debt and its kinship with justice. Atwood claims that this concept is ingrained in the human psyche, that it is apparent in early historical peoples, who associated their understanding of debt with that of justice, ideas that are typically exemplified by a female deity. Atwood holds that, with the rise of Ancient Greece, and especially the installation of the court system detailed in Aeschylus's Oresteia, this deity has been replaced by a more thorough conception of debt.
In 1984, she was the subject of a documentary film by Michael Rubbo, Margaret Atwood: Once in August. In 2003, Shaftesbury Films produced an anthology series, The Atwood Stories, which dramatized six of Atwood's short stories.
More information:
Code:
https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/3472.Margaret_Atwood
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e1 - [Positron Episode 02] - Choke Collar
e2 - Bluebeard's Egg
e3 - Bodily Harm
e4 - Circle Game
e5 - Dancing Girls
e6 - Dancing Girls and Other Stories
e7 - Good Bones
e8 - Good Bones and Simple Murders
e9 - I Dream of Zenia With the Bright Red Teeth
e10 - I'm Starved for Youe11 - Lusus Naturae
e12 - Murder in the Dark- Short Fictions and Pro
e13 - Payback- Debt and the Shadow Side of Wealth
e14 - Power Politics
e15 - The Circle Game- Poems
e16 - The Tent
e17 - Wilderness Tips