The novel, made into an award-winning television series in 2017,
presents a totalitarian future in the state of Gilead, where the
few remaining fertile women are forced into sexual servitude as
"handmaids" to repopulate a world facing environmental disaster.
"For years and years people were saying will there be a sequel,
please write a sequel, tell us what happened, and I always said
I can't do that," Atwood told British broadcaster the BBC in an
interview.
"But then a couple of things happened. Instead of going away
from Gilead as I thought had been happening in the 1990s, we
started going back towards Gilead in a number of places in the
world including the United States."
Recent moves to curtail access to abortion in the United States
have caused huge division and galvanised women's rights
activists.
U.S. President Donald Trump, who was elected in 2016, has said
he opposes abortions in most cases and he has joined many of his
fellow Republicans in seeking to limit them.
Many doctors and rights groups are fighting these efforts as
harmful to women's health and in breach of a constitutional
right to abortion.
Atwood said she was already conceptualizing a sequel to "The
Handmaid's Tale" when Trump was elected. At the time, the
television series based on her novel was being filmed.
"The frame around the show changed, and we knew at that moment
it would be viewed differently, which it was. So instead of
fantasy -- ha ha it will never happen -- it got much closer to
reality, because of the kinds of people backing Trump," Atwood
said.
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The series helped the original novel shoot back up the bestseller
lists, and made the handmaid's uniform of a long dark red cloak and
large white bonnet a symbol of female protest and resistance.
Fans gathered in London at midnight on Tuesday to hear Atwood read
from her new book, hailing it as a timely and necessary response to
an increasingly menacing world for women.
"The world in some ways is becoming a worse place for women and
particularly in the United States and so this is very current, and
very relevant and very necessary," said Anne Enith-Cooper, 57, who
attended the launch.
Another fan, 40-year-old Stacey Morris, said: "My daughter is 12 and
she's just starting to understand feminism and the importance of
being a woman... I'd really like for her to read this in the future
and to be able to share this with her."
Asked if she was nervous about the huge anticipation of her new
book, Atwood told the BBC: "There is that feeling that you have - a
lot of fanfare, the mountain roars and out comes this mouse. Will
they say "what?", "is that what all this fuss has been about?"
"You do have to point out it is a book, it is not regime change, it
is not something that is going to physically impact the lives of
many people, it is not riots in Moscow."
"The Testaments" has already landed Atwood a nomination for one of
the publishing world's top accolades, the Booker Prize.
(Reporting by Reuters Television; Writing by Alexandra Hudson)
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