Your cart

Close

Total AUD

Checkout

Imprint

  • Virago
  • Virago

In Other Worlds: SF and the Human Imagination

Margaret Atwood

1 Reviews

Rated 0

Prose: non-fiction, Fiction

Margaret Atwood's fascinating account of her lifelong relationship with science and speculative fiction.

From her days as a child reader in the 1940s, through her time at Harvard, where she studied the Victorian ancestors of the form and later as a writer and reviewer, Margaret Atwood has always been fascinated with science fiction.

Here she brings together three Ellmann lectures: 'Flying Rabbits' begins with her early rabbit superhero creations and goes on to speculate about masks, capes, weakling alter egos and Things with Wings; 'Burning Bushes' travels into Victorian otherlands and beyond; and 'Dire Cartographies' investigates Utopias and Dystopias, including Atwood's own ventures into those constructions.

In further essays Atwood explores and critiques the form and elucidates the differences - as she sees them - between 'science fiction' proper and 'speculative fiction', not to mention 'sword and sorcery', 'fantasy' and 'slipstream fiction.'

IN OTHER WORDS is a must-read.

Read More Read Less

Praise for In Other Worlds: SF and the Human Imagination

  • Eminently readable and accessible... The lectures are insightful and cogently argued with a neat comic turn of phrase... Her enthusiasm and level of intellectual engagement are second to none. - Financial Times - James Lovegrove

Read More Read Less

Margaret Atwood

Margaret Atwood is the author of more than forty works, including fiction, poetry and critical essays, and her books have been published in over thirty-five countries. She has won many literary awards and prizes.

This website uses cookies. Using this website means you are okay with this but you can find out more and learn how to manage your cookie choices here.Close cookie policy overlay