| No Images? Click here A million high fives to the person who can incorporate "widdershins" into your weekend vocabulary. If you had casual plans to check out a copy of Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale from your local library, we have some bad news: The waitlists are almost as daunting as the author’s dystopian vision for the future. What's even scarier is that earlier this week Atwood told Time that she "made nothing up" in the book, basing it instead on the control of women and babies in repressive regimes throughout history. Bonus: Because we can't wait for the release of the upcoming Hulu adaptation, we dove into the archives to see how Atwood's book was received in the 1980s. Let's just say, some of the takes haven't aged well. Did you know that Baskerville, that super popular font found on book covers and movie posters and college theses everywhere, dates back to the 1730s and was a personal favorite of Benjamin Franklin's? Yeah, it has a wild history worth reading about. This is not a drill. According to Liane Moriarty, a potential Season 2 of the HBO series "could bring in more of Bonnie’s story from the book. And also what happens next [for Celeste]. That’s the question that’s also a really interesting thing, when you’ve been through a relationship like that, how do you feel now? How would she feel? She’s grieving. She’s still grieving for the end of a terrible relationship and I think that would be a really interesting thing to explore. So there’s a whole lot of different storylines.” All we can say is: Bonnie! Angie Thomas’ The Hate U Give, a novel about police brutality against an innocent black teen, topped The New York Times’ bestseller list for YA Hardcovers, demonstrating an appetite for socially progressive stories. Here are eight other titles that combine storytelling with social justice. There is something striking about Lana’s easy smile for “Lust for Life,” which doesn’t appear to gratify anyone but herself. The fact that a female photographer (and Del Rey’s little sister) Chuck Grant took the photo might help with that conclusion. The image doesn’t subscribe to the typical women-musician formula demanding they appear “iconic,” or more than human, to garner respect. Ahead of the company’s April 18 debut at the Joyce Theater, HuffPost’s Damon Dahlen ventured to the Upper West Side to photograph members of Ballet Hispánico in their own neighborhood. Level up. Read this email and be THE most interesting person at your dinner party. Like what you see? Share with a friend. Can't get enough? Here are two other newsletters you'll love: HuffPost's Entertainment newsletter and HuffPost Must Reads. |
Friday, April 14, 2017
Margaret Atwood says nothing is made up in "Handmaid's Tale"
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