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Posted: 2023-03-25 04:55:50

In 2019, famed Canadian author Margaret Atwood lost her partner of 48 years, fellow novelist Graeme Gibson, to dementia.

Gibson was diagnosed with the condition in 2012. His death was not unexpected – but it was a devastating loss for Atwood, a two-time Booker Prize winner and the author of more than 50 books.

Even as Gibson's health deteriorated in early 2019, the couple embarked on a voyage by sea aboard the MS Queen Victoria to Australia — the birthplace of Gibson's mother.

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Listen: Margaret Atwood on ABC RN's The Book Show

"We did know that Graeme was going to die fairly soon, so we did a number of things in the last year or so that he really wanted to do, and that was one of them," Atwood told ABC RN's The Book Show earlier this month.

The author's grief permeates the pages of Old Babes in the Wood, her ninth short story collection, which was released this month.

Atwood, whose career spans seven decades, is best known for The Handmaid's Tale, adapted for television in 2017, and her award-winning novels The Blind Assassin and The Testaments.

She writes both historical fiction and speculative fiction — as well as poetry, non-fiction and the odd libretto — concerned with themes of totalitarianism, the erosion of human rights and the catastrophic effects of climate change.

In her latest book, Old Babes in the Wood, Atwood introduces readers to a typically weird array of characters, including a fictionalised version of influential English writer George Orwell and a talking snail.

She also revisits two characters readers first met in her 2006 short story collection Moral Disorder, Nell and Tig, who are loosely based on Atwood and her late partner.

An elderly man and woman standing on the street, wearing jackets
Gibson and Atwood, pictured in 2017, had one daughter, Eleanor, and shared a passion for bird-watching.(Getty Images: Leonardo Cendamo)

The role of the widow

The Nell and Tig stories are "autofiction", not memoir, Atwood says.

"They're fairly close to some things that happened in our life. But of course, fiction involves limitation … You don't put everything in."

In a number of stories in Moral Disorder, we see Nell and Tig fall in love and move from the city to a derelict farmhouse in the country, acquiring a menagerie of farm animals in the process. Throughout the book, Nell navigates the complexities of life as a second wife, stepmother, and, eventually, mother.

A book cover showing an illustration of a white cat's head with a bird-shaped eye against a black background
"This collection [is] testament to Atwood's staying power as a gifted and unique storyteller," Giselle Au-Nhien Nguyen wrote in The Saturday Paper.(Supplied: Penguin)

Old Babes in the Wood offers a sad reunion for readers: we learn Tig, like Gibson, has recently died, leaving Nell to negotiate her new, unwelcome role as a widow.

In the story titled Widows, Nell writes a letter to a younger friend about the raw and unpalatable truth of her grief — a letter that she will never send. In it, she describes how, "Tig still exists, as much as he ever did."

Nell discovers this "curious folding nature of time" is shared by the other widows and widowers who now form her inner circle.

"Anybody who has had a person close to them who has died will have had the same experience," Atwood says.

Nell and her companions gather to discuss the minutiae of widowhood: the obsessively recounted "death scenes", the tedium of "tidying up" a lifetime's worth of clutter, and their feelings of regret.

The story was first published in The Guardian in February and it hit a nerve with readers, says Atwood.

"Widows are passing it around to other widows. In other words, this is [a] pretty accurate [account]."

From the wilderness to witchcraft

Atwood was born in 1939 in Ottawa to mother Margaret, a dietitian, and father Carl, an entomologist whose fieldwork took the family into the Canadian wilderness for long stretches of time.

At just six months old, Atwood "was backpacked into the Quebec bush," she told fellow author Joyce Carol Oates in a 1978 New York Times interview.

While her peripatetic childhood meant she didn't complete a full year of school until she was in year 8, her education didn't suffer.

She told Oates: "My parents were great readers. They didn't encourage me to become a writer, exactly, but they gave me a more important kind of support; that is, they expected me to make use of my intelligence and abilities, and they did not pressure me into getting married."

A black and white photo of a young woman leaning on a fence, standing in front of a barn
Atwood, pictured here in 1972, quit her doctoral studies to pursue a writing career while she worked as an academic.(Getty Images: Ron Bull/Toronto Star)

Atwood completed a Bachelor of Arts at the University of Toronto in 1961 and went on to Harvard University, where she finished her master's in 1962.

Speaking on The Book Show, Atwood recalled being barred from entering Harvard's Lamont Library, which housed the university's undergraduate humanities collection, on account of her gender (women studying at Harvard were only permitted to use the library in 1967).

"As a compensation, I went down into the stacks in [Harvard's] Widener Library, where there was an extensive collection of witchcraft and demonology," she says.

The knowledge gleaned in these early research forays surfaces in My Evil Mother, a story in Old Babes in the Wood told from the perspective of a daughter whose mother may – or may not – be the latest incarnation of a centuries-old witch.

A 'downhill skier'

Atwood's first book was a collection of poetry, titled Double Persephone (1961).

Her debut novel The Edible Woman arrived in 1969, and Atwood soon established a reputation as one of Canada's leading and most versatile writers.

Her star continued to rise in the 80s and 90s, when three of her novels — The Handmaid's Tale (1985), Cat's Eye (1988) and Alias Grace (1996) — were finalists for the Booker Prize. She finally won the award in 2000 for historical fiction novel The Blind Assassin.

In recent years, her published works include the MaddAddam trilogy (2003-13), a speculative fiction series set against the backdrop of ecological disaster; Hag-Seed (2016), a modern-day retelling of Shakespeare's The Tempest; and poetry collection Dearly (2020).

In 2019, Atwood won the Booker Prize for a second time for The Testaments, the follow-up to The Handmaid's Tale, sharing the prize with British writer Bernadine Evaristo.

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Play Audio. Duration: 53 minutes 52 seconds
ABC RN's The Bookshelf co-host host Kate Evans said of The Testaments: "It's clever, it's engaging, and it's certainly thought-provoking."

Surprisingly, given her prodigious output, Atwood claims to be "lazy".

"Given the choice … between doing some writing and watching trashy TV, I will take the latter," she told The Book Show.

She explained her methods to ABC Radio Melbourne in 2020: "I write quickly, but then I revise a lot. There are two kinds of writers, generally speaking: those who have to have the first paragraph perfect before they can go on to the second paragraph, and downhill skiers like me.

"The idea is to get to the bottom of the hill and then go back up and do it again, only this time better."

Margaret Atwood poses for a photo while holding her book The Testaments
In 2019, Atwood, 79 at the time, became the oldest writer to win the Booker Prize, and the fourth to win it twice.(Supplied: Booker Prize)

Nothing without historical precedent

Atwood is best known for The Handmaid's Tale and its depiction of the oppressive patriarchal theocracy of Gilead.

When writing the novel, Atwood sought to capture the conservative backlash that followed the gains of the 70s.

"The 70s were a decade in which a lot of laws were changed. A lot of things became possible for women that had not been possible before. Roe versus Wade came in the United States [and] it was possible to get a credit card if you were married without your husband's permission," Atwood told ABC Radio Melbourne.

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