Rosalind Porter
Interview: Writing In Digital Age – Margaret Atwood
On a hot day in June, I went to Margaret Atwood’s Toronto home to ask her some questions about how the digital revolution that is currently shaking up the publishing industry feels from a writer’s perspective. Her interest in technology and the ways in which it shapes civil society has featured in many of her novels, not least The Handmaid’s Tale and, most recently, The Year of the Flood; she’s an avid blogger and Tweeter, and she’s the inventor of the LongPen. As well as being technologically literate, she earned a reputation as something of a psychic in 2008 after the publication of Payback, a book about debt culture that rather presciently appeared to predict the ensuing economic downturn. As publishers, editors and writers continue to brace themselves for the great unknown, I welcomed her characteristically lucid and far-sighted thoughts on a subject ridden with hyperbole.
RP: In a recent interview for the iPhone app of The Good Man Jesus and the Scoundrel Christ, Philip Pullman likened being a writer, at this moment of technological uncertainty, to being strapped to the front of a speeding train with no driver. Does that metaphor ring true
Sign Up to our newsletter
Receive free articles, highlights from the archive, news, details of prizes, and much more.@Lit_Review
Follow Literary Review on Twitter
Twitter Feed
Spring has sprung and here is the April issue of @Lit_Review featuring @sophieolive on Dorothea Tanning, @JamesCahill on Peter Hujar and Paul Thek, @lifeisnotanovel on Stephanie Wambugu, @BaptisteOduor on Gwendoline Riley and so much more: http://literaryreview.co.uk
A review of my biography of Wittgenstein, and of his newly published last love letters, in the Literary Review: via @Lit_Review
Jane O'Grady - It’s a Wonderful Life
Jane O'Grady: It’s a Wonderful Life - Ludwig Wittgenstein: Philosophy in the Age of Airplanes by Anthony Gottlieb;...
literaryreview.co.uk
It was my pleasure to review Stephanie Wambugu’s enjoyably Ferrante-esque debut Lonely Crowds for @Lit_Review’s April issue, out now
Joseph Williams - Friends Disunited
Joseph Williams: Friends Disunited - Lonely Crowds by Stephanie Wambugu
literaryreview.co.uk