“So we created a special edition of a book that’s been challenged and banned for decades.” This uniquely “unburnable” Handmaid’s Tale “will be presented for auction by Sotheby’s New York from May 23 to June 7 with all proceeds going to benefit PEN America’s work in support of free expression.” You can bid on it at Sotheby’s site, where as of this writing the price stands at USD $70,000. “Across the United States and around the world, books are being challenged, banned, and even burned,” says publisher Penguin Random House. It is against such banning that the latest edition of Atwood’s novel stands, printed and bound using only fireproof materials. Fortunately, The Handmaid’s Taleis now widely available, unlike certain books in certain places that have been subject to bans. The only way to fortify yourself against such abuse of literature is, of course, actually to read the book. Like George Orwell and Ray Bradbury’s famous works, The Handmaid’s Tale also seems at risk of becoming less often read than publicly referenced - and therefore, no small amount of the time, publicly misinterpreted. It’s even become prominent in mass culture, frequently referenced in discussions of real-life politics and society in the manner of Nineteen Eighty-Four or Fahrenheit 451. But the book has enjoyed its greatest fame in the past decade, thanks in part to a 2017 adaptation on Hulu and a sequel, The Testaments, published two years thereafter.
When first published in 1985, Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale drew acclaim for how it combined and made new the genre conventions of the dystopian, historical, and fantasy novel.