"There are a number of things which I haven't done and wouldn't put my teeth into like the western novel or the 'Mills and Boons' kind of romantic fiction.
"I can't write about classic science fiction; about another planet. I also can't write about fantasy and I'm not good at dragons," Atwood says.
The Man Booker Prize winning author and poet who has 15 novels, 17 books of poetry and 10 non-fictions to her credit, is a guest of honour at the five-day long Jaipur Literature Festival here that began on January 21.
She narrates how her jobless protagonist couple (Charmaine and Stan), living out of a car, turn the tables with what in the book is "The Positron Project."
"The novel begins when they are offered an alternate lifestyle inside an experiment called the 'Positron Project.' You live inside a town which has a big wall around it and you don't get out for the duration of your signed period," she explains.
Charmaine and Stan find employment in a prison in Atwood's hypothetical town, Consilience where on alternating months, residents must leave their homes and function as inmates in the Positron prison system.
The genesis of the idea behind the unique project lay in the concept of 'prisons for profit' prevalent in the US where the author has consciously set her story.
The acclaimed Canadian novelist says she had also participated in several prison protest marches before she set out to write the book.
Atwood is said to have been influenced by writers like
George Orwell, Virginia Woolf, Jane Austen, William Shakespeare, Aldous Huxley, George Eliott and Charles Dickens whose writings have repeatedly featured dystopian societies.
"A lot of this comes of having lived in the 20th century. People have lived through World Wars and there is an imagining about what I could have done and we all have pretty heroic ideas about what we could have done. Dystopia is a blueprint in which the reader thinks about his possibilities of doing something," she says.
The author feels that the present moment is hanging somewhere between utopia and dystopia.
"Right now we live in both worlds, where on one hand things are going to get better with more feasibility and astonishing discoveries. On the other hand, things are going to get worse with climate change and other things that we've come to know of. Let's see who gets there first - the utopia or the dystopia," says Atwood.
The author is dismissive of categorising literature as high and low and admitted that in the absence of television and other forms of entertainment, she grew up reading "all kinds of books."
Unlike many of her contemporaries, Atwood is appreciative of the rise of the Internet which she says is creating a lot of platforms for children to be able to access writing.
The writer has an upcoming comic book whose superhero Angel Catbird part cat and part bird.
She is also part of a newly formed tradition called "Hogarth Shakespeare Project" where contemporary bestselling and celebrated authors have come together to re-imagine the playwright's plays.
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