The top 10 neighbors for Margaret Atwood span blogs, podcasts, activism organizations, a book publisher, a comedian, and a humor account — no single subcategory dominates, and no other Author appears in the set.
The shape is flat: scores run from 0.97 (Letters of Note) down to 0.97 (John Hodgman), a band of less than one percentage point across all ten. The leading neighbor is Letters of Note (0.97), a blog, followed closely by Indivisible Guide (0.97), an activism organization, and This American Life (0.97), a podcast. Grist (0.97) and ProPublica (0.97) continue the pattern — a website and a non-profit, respectively. Timothy McSweeney (0.97) is the lone book publisher in the top 10, and Jon Lovett (0.97) and John Hodgman (0.97) are the two comedians. Radiolab (0.97) adds another podcast, and The Mysterious LOLGOP (0.97) rounds out the set as a humor and satire account.
Tallying subcategories across the ten: Podcasts and Radio (2), Comedians (2), Blogs (1), Activism (1), Websites (1), Non-Profit (1), Book Publishers (1), Humor Memes and Satire (1). No Authors appear among the neighbors. The mix is cross-kind throughout — the audience that follows Atwood overlaps most with people drawn to public-radio storytelling, political commentary, literary publishing, and politically engaged comedy, rather than with audiences of other authors.
The flat, cross-kind shape suggests an audience defined less by a single content type than by a consistent orientation: literary, civically engaged, and comfortable moving between long-form journalism, activist causes, and satirical commentary.