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  1. After the visitors leave, David offhandedly accuses Malmstrom of being a C.I.A. operative who is organizing an American invasion of Canada. The narrator looks through her father's records and consequently believes that he is likely dead.

    • Character List

      David’s constant joking and imitation of cartoon characters...

    • Themes

      Themes are the fundamental and often universal ideas...

    • Motifs

      Atwood packs Surfacing with images of Americans invading and...

  2. Surfacing follows the story of an unnamed narrator as she travels back to Quebec to search for her father. Having not been there for a few years, she returns with her boyfriend, Joe, and her friends, Anna and David, who are married to each other.

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  4. David is the model of male dominance in Surfacing. David initially appears to be an ideal husband, as he jokes and flirts with Anna. However, Atwood twists her portrayal of David by revealing the cruelty that underscores his jokes and the emptiness of his flirtation.

  5. Accompanied by her lover, Joe, and a married couple, Anna and David, the unnamed protagonist meets her past in her childhood house, recalling events and feelings, while trying to find clues to her father's mysterious disappearance.

    • Canada
    • 1972
  6. Surfacing by Margaret Atwood is a captivating novel that takes its readers on a profound journey into the wilderness of the Canadian backwoods and the even more complex wilderness of the human psyche. Published in 1972, this book stands out as one of Atwood’s early works that cemented her reputation as a formidable force in literature.

  7. The novel is about an unnamed female protagonist, an illustrator of fairy tales, whose search for her missing father leads her to make several important, but disturbing discoveries about herself. The novel is set in Canada, in a town bordering Quebec; the tensions between Quebecois and other Canadians, and between Canadians and Americans, are ...

  8. Surfacing is a dense, multilayered narrative with tantalizing symbols. Margaret Atwood’s second major novel, it was the first to gain international critical attention.

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