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Margaret Atwood

"The society in 'The Handmaid's Tale' is a throwback to the early Puritans whom I studied extensively at Harvard under Perry Miller, to whom the book is dedicated."

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"The society in 'The Handmaid's Tale' is a throwback to the early Puritans whom I studied extensively at Harvard under Perry Miller, to whom the book is dedicated."

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Donna Grant

"Most peoples are prisoners of other people's thoughts."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"Your water is in the bottles, and my water is in the bucket, but we are brothers? I am collecting garbage, and you are in the bed, but we are sisters? My fingers are broken, and your hands are so soft, but we are family? Your God is like an angel, and my God is like an evil, but we are equal? My stomach is empty, and your stomach is so big, but we are humans?"

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"We...advance toward a state of society in which not only each man but every impulse in each man claims carte blanche."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"Women who don't like the rules change the rules."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"People are very busy; they are so busy that when they walk in the crowds they see no one, no one but themselves; they hear no voice, no voice but their own voice!"

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"Probably the people on the street know better than the people at home."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"In a materialistic society, the dead body of a rich man's dog is regarded as a corpse; that of a poor man, a carcass."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"People on corporate conveyor belts, like animals in slaughter-chutes are all part of the same big massacre of joy."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"When modern sociologists talk of the necessity of accommodating one's self to the trend of the time, they forget that the trend of the time at its best consists entirely of people who will not accommodate themselves to anything. At its worst it consists of many millions of frightened creatures all accommodating themselves to a trend that is not there. And that is becoming more and more the situation...Every man speaks of public opinion, and means by public opinion, public opinion minus his opinion."

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Personal Development

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Donna Grant

"Poverty is like a crumb that sits at a table, and starves itself to death."

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Margaret Atwood
"All you have to do, I tell myself, is keep your mouth shut and look stupid. It shouldn't be that hard."

Humor

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Margaret Atwood
"For me the experience of writing is really an experience of losing control. I think it's very much like dreaming or like surfing. You go out there and wait for a wave, and when it comes it takes you somewhere and you don't know where it'll go."

Creativity

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Margaret Atwood
"Better not to invent her in her absence. Better to wait until she's actually here. Then he can make her up as she goes along."

Imagination

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Margaret Atwood
"We yearned for the future. How did we learn it, that talent for insatiability?"

Hope

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Margaret Atwood
"Here the children have a custom. After the celebration of evil they take those vacant heads that shone once with such anguish and glee and throw them over the bridge, watching the smash, orange, as they hit below, We were standing underneath when you told it. People do that with themselves when they are finished, light scooped out. He landed here, you said, marking it with your foot.You wouldn't do it that way, empty, you wouldn't wait, you would jump with the light still in you."

Mortality

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Margaret Atwood
"A writer's age at the time of a work's composition is never irrelevant."

Creativity

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Margaret Atwood
"This form of love is like the painof childbirth: so intenseit's hard to remember afterwards."

Love

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Margaret Atwood
"How did the war creep up? How did it gather itself together? What was it made from? What secrets, lies, betrayals? What loves and hatreds? What sums of money, what metals?"

Conflict

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Margaret Atwood
"Could it be he was feeling a certain nostalgia for the war, despite its stench and meaningless carnage? For that questionless life of instinct?"

Emotion

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Margaret Atwood
"Neither of us says the word love, not once. It would be tempting fate; it would be romance, bad luck."

Emotion

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