June sitting in front of the Waterford home.

2 Comments

  1. Taking note of most of my Atwood experience being adaptations and not the original work, I think she probably likes the show’s cultural impact but probably finds the direction someone’s own. Which is probably why she is writing the sequel. Maybe not out of frustration but more so since the show has veered a bit too far away from the source that she wants to reassert her narrative. Not to compete, but offer a more realistic alternative.

  2. Your comment about events of this series being “made to present hope rather than prevent realism” will ring even more true for people who’ve read the original novel. At this point it’s become rather bizarre how many times this show has spared major characters:

    EVERY SINGLE CHARACTER who either dies or is successfully defeated by the government in the book, is both alive and defiant in the series (Emily, Moira, Janine, Serena).

    Also, EVERY SINGLE CHARACTER where it is left ambiguous in the novel as to if they are alive or dead… they are all unambiguously alive in the series
    (Luke, Nick, Fred)

    “The Handmaid’s Tale” is like the exact opposite of “Game Of Thrones” – it’s SCARED to get rid of characters or have them lose too completely.

    In September, Margaret Atwood’s novel “The Testaments” will be published. It is a sequel to “The Handmaid’s Tale”, and one of the first facts revealed about the novel revealed in press releases is that her sequel will contradict the events of Seasons 2 & 3 of the TV series and go off in its own direction. I don’t know if that’s indicative of Atwood herself having issues with the way the series continued her story or not… but the main reason I’m watching Season 3 is so I can better compare Atwood’s own continuation with the TV version.

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