Hello, I'm Lauren Laverne, and this is the Desert Island Discs podcast from BBC Radio 4.
Every week I ask my guests to choose the eight tracks, book and luxury,
that they'd want to take with them if they were cast away to a desert island.
For rights reasons, the music's shorter than on the original broadcast,
but you can find a version with longer music tracks on BBC's sounds.
Listeners will also get access to episodes 28 days earlier than everyone else.
I hope you enjoy listening.
My cast away this week is the writer Margaret Atwood,
one of the most critically acclaimed authors in the world.
She's won the Booker Prize twice and since 1961 has published poetry, short stories,
children's books, essays, the libretti's operas and of course her novels,
including Cat's Eye, Alias Grace, The Blind Assassin and 1985's The Handmaid's Tale,
which has gained a new resonance in our politically polarized times.
Placards at the Women's March in Washington bore the legend,
make Margaret atward fiction again, though, as she points out,
everything that takes place in the dystopian setting of Gilead has in fact already happened in the world we live in.
She was born just weeks after the outbreak of World War II and says that gave her an interest in totalitarian regimes and their rise and fall.
She also had an early appreciation of the natural world and a critical distance on the society she was part of.
Her father was an entomologist and the family lived in the Canadian woods for eight months of the year
while he pursued his research.