“A word after a word after a word is power.” Margaret Atwood’s observation has lingered in classrooms, libraries, and the quiet corners where writers wrestle with sentences. Atwood, one of the most influential literary voices of our time, has written more than fifty books spanning fiction, poetry, and critical essays. Her words reveal a constant awareness of how language not only tells stories but molds thought, memory, and resistance.
Atwood’s path to authorship was not paved with ease. Growing up in Canada during the 1940s and 1950s, she often found herself isolated, living for long stretches in the forests of Quebec where her father worked as an entomologist. Without the comforts of electricity or running water, she found companionship in books from the city and the boundless world of her imagination. She once described reading by kerosene lamp, devouring texts while surrounded by the vast silence of the woods. Out of that environment, she developed an ear for solitude and observation. What some might have seen as loneliness became her apprenticeship in listening—an apprenticeship that shaped her into a writer who pays attention to the smallest shifts in language, the hidden power in repetition, and the way words echo in silence.
Later, as a young poet and scholar, Atwood faced skepticism. Canadian literature was often dismissed as minor or derivative compared to British or American traditions. Publishers hesitated to take risks on voices insisting Canada had stories worth telling. Yet Atwood pressed forward. With The Edible Woman in 1969, she began exploring themes of identity, gender, and societal expectation. Her sharp humor and irony unsettled some and exhilarated others. Atwood’s career unfolded during a time when women’s voices were still fighting for equal space in the literary world. Her persistence carved out room not only for herself but for an entire generation of Canadian writers, reminding readers that national identity and female experience could no longer be ignored.
Atwood’s works have left an indelible mark on society. Few novels resonate with such unsettling timeliness as The Handmaid’s Tale (1985). A story of a theocratic regime reducing women to reproductive vessels, it has been hailed as both warning and mirror. Decades after its publication, the book inspired widespread discussion about women’s rights, freedom, and the fragility of democracy. When it was adapted into a television series in 2017, the red robes and white bonnets worn by its characters became symbols in real-world protests across multiple countries.
But Atwood’s influence does not rest on The Handmaid’s Tale alone. Works such as Cat’s Eye (1988), Alias Grace (1996), and Oryx and Crake (2003) stretch across themes of memory, justice, and the environmental consequences of unchecked ambition. Each book stands as a reminder that literature can probe wounds, question certainties, and ask what kind of future we build when words fail to guide us.
Margaret Atwood has shown again and again that writing is not a pastime tucked into spare hours. It is a form of power—quiet, steady, and enduring. From the woods of her childhood to the global stage of political and cultural debate, she has wielded words as both scalpel and shield. Her legacy is not simply in the awards she has gathered—Booker Prizes, Governor General’s Awards, and countless honorary degrees—but in the countless readers who now see writing as something alive, restless, and capable of stirring change.
Writers often wait for inspiration to arrive in dazzling strokes. Atwood reminds us that the real strength comes in persistence: word after word, line after line, building toward something greater than any single moment could hold.
For those who write, the lesson is clear. Read Margaret Atwood’s work, not only for the stories but for the discipline behind them. Study how her sentences bend irony, how her metaphors unsettle, how her characters embody both frailty and resilience. Then, write. Write steadily, deliberately, without waiting for a perfect day. Words, when gathered with care, still shape history. They can still move stone.
Stories like these remind us how words shape lives—how they can steady us, stir us, and spark change. The Power of Authors, by Evan and Lois Swensen, carries this conviction to its core. It isn’t a manual on writing but a meditation on purpose, showing how every word—whether in a novel, a thank-you note, or a simple message—can echo far beyond its moment. This book invites readers to see authors not only as storytellers, but as builders of memory, guardians of truth, and quiet catalysts of change.
It’s available now on Amazon (http://bit.ly/3K6o8AM), at Barnes and Noble, and everywhere good books are sold.

This is Publication Consultants’ motivation for constantly striving to assist authors sell and market their books. Author Campaign Method (ACM) of sales and marketing is Publication Consultants’ plan to accomplish this so that our authors’ books have a reasonable opportunity for success. We know the difference between motion and direction. ACM is direction! ACM is the process for authorpreneurs who are serious about bringing their books to market. ACM is a boon for them.
Release Party
Web Presence
Book Signings
Facebook Profile and Facebook Page
Active Social Media Participation
Ebook Cards
The Great Alaska Book Fair: October 8, 2016


Costco Book Signings
eBook Cards

Benjamin Franklin Award
Jim Misko Book Signing at Barnes and Noble
Cortex is for serious authors and will probably not be of interest to hobbyists. We recorded our Cortex training and information meeting. If you’re a serious author, and did not attend the meeting, and would like to review the training information, kindly let us know. Authors are required to have a Facebook author page to use Cortex.
Correction:
This is Publication Consultants’ motivation for constantly striving to assist authors sell and market their books. ACM is Publication Consultants’ plan to accomplish this so that our authors’ books have a reasonable opportunity for success. We know the difference between motion and direction. ACM is direction! ACM is the process for authors who are serious about bringing their books to market. ACM is a boon for serious authors, but a burden for hobbyist. We don’t recommend ACM for hobbyists.

We’re the only publisher we know of that provides authors with book signing opportunities. Book signing are appropriate for hobbyist and essential for serious authors. To schedule a book signing kindly go to our website, <
We hear authors complain about all the personal stuff on Facebook. Most of these complaints are because the author doesn’t understand the difference difference between a Facebook profile and a Facebook page. Simply put, a profile is for personal things for friends and family; a page is for business. If your book is just a hobby, then it’s fine to have only a Facebook profile and make your posts for friends and family; however, if you’re serious about your writing, and it’s a business with you, or you want it to be business, then you need a Facebook page as an author. It’s simple to tell if it’s a page or a profile. A profile shows how many friends and a page shows how many likes. Here’s a link <> to a straight forward description on how to set up your author Facebook page.



Mosquito Books has a new location in the Anchorage international airport and is available for signings with 21 days notice. Jim Misko had a signing there yesterday. His signing report included these words, “Had the best day ever at the airport . . ..”



The Lyin Kings: The Wannabe World Leaders
Time and Tide


ReadAlaska 2014
Readerlink and Book Signings
2014 Independent Publisher Book Awards Results

Bonnye Matthews Radio Interview
Rick Mystrom Radio Interview
When he published those overseas blogs as the book The Innocents Abroad, it would become a hit. But you couldn’t find it in bookstores.
More NetGalley
Mary Ann Poll
Bumppo
Computer Spell Checkers
Seven Things I Learned From a Foreign Email
2014 Spirit of Youth Awards
Book Signings


Blog Talk Radio
Publication Consultants Blog
Book Signings



Don and Lanna Langdok
Ron Walden
Book Signings Are Fun
Release Party Video
Erin’s book,
Heather’s book,
New Books