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The Best Books, Movies, Video Games, and Podcasts to Check Out After Watching ‘The Handmaid's Tale’

Source: LifehackerView Original
lifestyleApril 28, 2026

Hulu’s adaptation of The Handmaid’s Tale hit our screens at precisely the right moment—a time when many had Americans begun to wonder if our democracy was as robust as we’d always assumed. It brought Margaret Atwood’s grim vision of a totalitarian, patriarchal, and fanatical future America (now known as The Republic of Gilead) to life with sharp writing, electric performances, a striking visual style, and instantly iconic costume designs.

Now that the series has ended, you might be wondering how you’ll get your fix of feel-bad dystopian futures. Thanks in part to its success, there are a lot of other TV series you can stream that offer similarly provocative visions of our Worst Possible Future (including the spinoff series The Testaments)—but you can also plunge deeper into books, movies, games, and podcasts that deliver similar visions of where we may be headed.

The best books like The Handmaid's Tale

The Handmaid’s Tale is a literary adaptation, after all, and the series maintained that novelistic feel. If you’re a reader, here are more books that explore similar themes.

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The Testaments, by Margaret Atwood

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Future Home of the Living God, by Louise Erdrich

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Women Talking, by Miriam Toews

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The Children of Men, by P.D. James

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The Gate to Women's Country, by Sheri S. Tepper

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The Testaments, by Margaret Atwood

The adaptation of Atwood’s novel went far beyond her original vision out of necessity: You don’t get six seasons of June fighting the patriarchy without inventing a lot of new material. In 2019, Atwood delivered the long-awaited sequel to her novel, offering her thoughts on what the larger picture of Gilead would look like. Three women smuggle their experiences out of the Republic—a young woman who rejects her arranged marriage despite her strong faith, a teen girl who finds herself questioning the bedrock of her existence, and, most intriguingly, Lydia, the stern, conflicted Aunt responsible for training (and punishing) the Handmaids.

Future Home of the Living God, by Louise Erdrich

If you’re intrigued by ideas around reproductive freedom, bodily agency, and how quickly society could revert to a more primitive state, Future Home of the Living God is the perfect choice. In a grim future, evolution has gone haywire—plants and animals appear to be evolving backwards, and a range of threats challenge humanity’s survival. When the government begins rounding up pregnant women, Cedar Hawk Songmaker flees, embarking on a violent journey as she fights for herself and the autonomy of women everywhere.

Women Talking, by Miriam Toews

If you loved how The Handmaid’s Tale explores the ways the women of Gilead sustain and defend themselves without ever holding real power, Women Talking will be fascinating. The women of the Mennonite colony of Molotschna have long believed demons attack them at night. When a man is caught assaulting one of them, however, they realize they have been lied to and gaslit by the patriarchal leaders of the colony—in reality, those men have been drugging and abusing them. Unable to read and ignorant of the outside world, the women gather to discuss what’s to be done, with the help of the one man in the community they trust.

The Children of Men, by P.D. James

It’s sometimes forgotten that the precipitating event leading to the Republic of Gilead in The Handmaid’s Tale is a fertility crisis. James’ dystopian novel goes one step further—by the year 2021, no children have been born for more than 25 years. The novel explores the slow dissolution of civilization in the face of humanity’s inevitable extinction, with each grim development more horrifyingly plausible than the last. If it’s the dystopia of it all that you love, this novel is the ideal choice.

The Gate to Women's Country, by Sheri S. Tepper

If you’re looking for a similar vibe to The Handmaid’s Tale, but from a different perspective, Tepper’s 1988 novel will deliver. In a post-apocalyptic Pacific Northwest, a matriarchy has emerged. Women and children live peacefully within the walls of small cities, while men live in more primitive conditions outside, as warriors. But keeping those two groups apart forever isn’t possible, and when a young woman in Marthatown begins a friendship with a warrior named Chernon, change—violent and otherwise—is inevi

The Best Books, Movies, Video Games, and Podcasts to Check Out After Watching ‘The Handmaid's Tale’ | TrendPulse