The Stories We Bring Back
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Description
As the dialogue unfolds, Atwood speaks with unusual intimacy about the practice of writing -- its rituals and terrors, its moral weight, its comic absurdities. She describes the writer's task as a perilous journey into darkness, a "negotiation with the dead," from which one hopes to emerge carrying light. Vlavianos meets her as equal and foil: philosopher, poet, and guide through the classical imagination. The result is both public conversation and private meditation -- a spirited encounter between two minds steeped in literature and alive to the political urgencies of our time.
At once erudite and mischievous, The Stories We Bring Back reveals Atwood at her most lucid and unguarded. Part mythological symposium, part masterclass, part political reckoning, it is a book about the endurance of art and the stubborn hope that every act of storytelling -- even in an age of noise and tyranny -- remains, as Atwood insists, "an act of optimism."
Book Information
Description
As the dialogue unfolds, Atwood speaks with unusual intimacy about the practice of writing -- its rituals and terrors, its moral weight, its comic absurdities. She describes the writer's task as a perilous journey into darkness, a "negotiation with the dead," from which one hopes to emerge carrying light. Vlavianos meets her as equal and foil: philosopher, poet, and guide through the classical imagination. The result is both public conversation and private meditation -- a spirited encounter between two minds steeped in literature and alive to the political urgencies of our time.
At once erudite and mischievous, The Stories We Bring Back reveals Atwood at her most lucid and unguarded. Part mythological symposium, part masterclass, part political reckoning, it is a book about the endurance of art and the stubborn hope that every act of storytelling -- even in an age of noise and tyranny -- remains, as Atwood insists, "an act of optimism."



