Watch: How ‘The Testaments’, Margaret Atwood’s sequel to ‘Handmaid’s Tale’ was launched in London
Midnight at Waterstones bookstore in London was electric with excitement.
Almost 35 years after The Handmaid's Tale was published @MargaretAtwood came to Waterstones to launch its sequel, #TheTestaments. Here's a taste of an incredible evening when authors, activists and readers came together to celebrate her remarkable legacy https://t.co/v8gFPsmGey pic.twitter.com/GBMzWvQRgV
— Waterstones (@Waterstones) September 10, 2019
A stream of women in flowing red robes and white bonnets walking in pairs at night. Only, these handmaids weren’t in Gilead, they were in London and headed to the grand launch of Margaret Atwood’s The Testaments – the long-awaited sequel to arguably her most famous book, the dystopian feminist novel The Handmaid’s Tale.
Published in 1985, The Handmaid’s Tale tells the story of a bleak future world where an absolute patriarchal regime in Gilead has replaced women’s rights completely. Women are denied independent identities, rights over their bodies and rights to their own children or lives. Instead, dressed in red cloaks and white bonnets, they must serve as handmaids – effectively surrogate mothers for high-placed government officials, allowing the use and abuse of their womb in exchange for the right to be alive.
After much anticipation, the last of the six #BookerPrize2019 shortlist is now available to buy. Tune into the next Booker Prize podcast out on 27 September to hear more from the launch event @waterstones @MargaretAtwood #thetestaments pic.twitter.com/E5fQkaUl8R
— The Booker Prizes (@TheBookerPrizes) September 9, 2019
For several years after the release of Handmaid’s Tale, much to the disappointment of fans, Atwood said she had no plans to write a sequel. But then, “history changed,” she told CBC’s The Current. “Instead of going away from Gilead, we turned around and started coming back towards Gilead.”
And that is how The Testaments was born. (Maybe the Hulu/MGM series had something to do with, though?)
Distinctive in green, black and white, a follow up from the red, black and white of the first book, The Testaments picks up from fifteen years after the first novel. Already in the run for the Man Booker Prize and the Scotiabank Giller Prize, the book revisits the dystopian republic Gilead.
The sequel is told by three narrators – all connected to Handmaid’s Offred: Her first daughter who was taken away from her before Gilead was created; her second daughter whom she is pregnant with by the end of Handmaid; and Aunt Lydia, the vicious matriarch responsible for the anti-feminist who helped indoctrinate other women with the beliefs of Gilead.
Queues around the corner for the midnight @WaterstonesPicc launch of @MargaretAtwood’s #TheTestaments... 👁💚🙏 pic.twitter.com/ol31htGnrD
— VINTAGE Books (@vintagebooks) September 9, 2019
Hosted by Vintage Books at the popular Waterstones book store in London’s Piccadilly, the Monday midnight launch attracted huge crowds.
Goddamn this is cool, well played @vintagebooks #thetestaments pic.twitter.com/LzxGU6JN1A
— Tom Noble (@_Noble) September 9, 2019
The power of Pantone 802 💚 #firstglimpse #backtoschool #MargaretAtwood #thetestaments pic.twitter.com/PmyXGOx855
— Chatto&Windus (@ChattoBooks) September 4, 2019
The launch itself, attended by fans and authors including Neil Gaiman and Jeanette Winterson included the reading of excerpts and a countdown to the reveal of the book. The crowd was of mostly women in their 20s and 30s – nursing acid-green mocktails and tucking into cupcakes.
“Two Pearl Girls dressed in floor-length, silvery gowns, stay steadfastly in character all night. ‘She handed me an orange,’ says one girl in the queue, bewildered but impressed, cradling the fruit like a precious jewel (and not yet knowing she held a crucial plot detail),” reported Sian Cain for The Guardian awed by the rockstar status a book attempting to dismantle the patriarchy has attained.
Midnight! Welcome to the world #TheTestaments 🔔@MargaretAtwood rings in the release 🙏 pic.twitter.com/er7z0GtuQq
— VINTAGE Books (@vintagebooks) September 9, 2019
Live from @Waterstones, @MargaretAtwood reads from #TheTestaments https://t.co/NDpgQbkLRt
— Waterstones (@Waterstones) September 9, 2019
The @Waterstones cupcakes for this evening have arrived! #TheTestaments @vintagebooks pic.twitter.com/1X5TYJhil2
— Margaret E. Atwood (@MargaretAtwood) September 9, 2019
What else is there even to do tonight? #TheTestaments pic.twitter.com/QKMh1lrggP
— Loubee (@loujbee) September 10, 2019
But in a world that is still reeling from the blows of misogyny, where women are still denied abortion rights, where the counter of violence against women keeps ticking upwards when girl children are killed, raped or married off – such fanfare is perhaps unsurprising.
Because, unlike reality, dystopia often ends with hope. In Atwood’s Handmaid Offred’s story ended abruptly, but the last chapter was a glimpse into a saner future – one where control and normalcy are restored.
And one can imagine women – scarred from the words they read simply in newspapers every day – must look forward to that hope.
I love Margaret Atwood and I’m looking forward to reading The Testaments. But the aesthetics of that midnight Waterstones launch event last night with grown adults dressed up as Handmaids looks mortifying. Like Harry Potter launch for a very specific type of tote bag feminism
— shon faye. (@shonfaye) September 10, 2019
However, as one Twitter user pointed out, there was a thing rather odd about the ceremony.
In the nearly 35 years since Handmaid was published, the red cloak and white bonnet have become almost a feminist symbol, a statement against the oppression of female sexual rights, for the liberation of the woman’s body.
To have grown women parade in those costumes, to use that as a marketing technique? We can’t quite say, “Praise be!”