I’ve been reading everything I’ve run across on The Handmaid’s Tale. Everything. If you haven’t read The Handmaid’s Tale, now is the time to read it. It’s hard to get through, and hard to reread. This dystopian future isn’t too far off from where we are now and isn’t actually out of the realm of possibility. I highly recommend the book and the show, as hard as both can be to get through, there’s an important lesson from both. If you haven’t been watching, some of these articles may contain spoilers. Be careful reading.
Handmaid’s Tale Is Somehow All the More Terrifying as a Hulu Show
Why Alexis Bledel Is The Handmaid’s Tale’s Secret Weapon
Alexis Bledel As Ofglen in The Handmaid’s Tale Is the Role She Was Born to Play
Review: ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ Creates a Chilling Man’s World
THE HANDMAID’S TALE: MOTHERHOOD OR DEATH
The Radical Feminist Aesthetic Of “The Handmaid’s Tale”
Margaret Atwood on What ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ Means in the Age of Trump
The Handmaid’s Tale Is a Warning to Conservative Women
‘The Handmaid’s Tale’: A Newly Resonant Dystopia Comes to TV
MARGARET ATWOOD, THE PROPHET OF DYSTOPIA
The Handmaid’s Tale: The Hidden Meaning in Those Eerie Costumes
Samira Wiley, Alexis Bledel Go Inside ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’s’ Disturbing LGBTQ Treatment
In ‘Handmaid’s Tale,’ a postracial, patriarchal hellscape
The Handmaid’s Tale: The Biggest Changes From the Book
The Handmaid’s Tale’s Closing Songs Are Slyly Genius
The Handmaid’s Tale is timely. But that’s not why it’s so terrifying.
It’s The Little Moments of the Handmaid’s Tale That Hurt The Most
Handmaid’s Tale: The Strange History of “Nolite te Bastardes Carborundorum”
YES, “THE HANDMAID’S TALE” IS FEMINIST
WE LIVE IN THE REPRODUCTIVE DYSTOPIA OF “THE HANDMAID’S TALE”