Tv Shows Based on Books– Since February 19, the series “Wir Kinder vom Bahnhof Zoo” has been accessible on Amazon Prime.
The series is underwhelming, despite the fact that the streaming provider with the scandalous story about the drug-addicted girl, Christiane F, is plainly making a sensation, a sensation, and a bang:
The eight episodes have been dubbed “discouraged” by German radio stations, and “Moviepilot” has been dubbed an “Amazon disaster.”
The series had a little better reception among viewers, but it still only received a 5.5 out of 10 rating on IMDB.
According to almost uniform judgment, the drug environment was too staged and drug intake was more appealing than deterring, according to almost uniform judgment.
Furthermore, the series deviates too much from the original. The latter complaint was also leveled about “Fate: The Winx Saga,” which is available on Netflix.
The Amazon Prime competitor also had to deal with a lot of backlash in order to achieve its hoped-for success.
Both series sparked a debate among critics and fans of the genre: what makes a decent novel-to-series adaptation? Is it true that just because a series is based on a book, it is inevitably good (or better)?
“Any film content can be expanded into a series, but not everyone needs to,” Radionetzwerk Deutschland concludes.
Nonetheless, there are numerous successful series examples that demonstrate: If you make a series out of a book, it can be expanded in many ways and levels, and it can even gain in depth.
The Best TV Shows Based on Books
Although many people think that a TV series based on books cannot explain the entire contents of a book, it is not uncommon for a TV series adaptation to become a masterpiece in the TV series industry.
The reason why many people like TV series based on books is that the atmosphere and imagination are more clearly depicted.
Therefore, I will give recommendations for book adaptations of TV series that you must watch. One of them is the best TV series of all time.
1. Tv Series Based on Books – You ( 2014 – 2016)
Caroline Kepnes’ young-adult novels of the same name, published in 2014 and 2016, inspired one of Netflix’s most successful productions.
The books are told solely from Joe’s point of view about the psychotic stalker (and bookseller) Joe, who justifies all of his actions under the cover of love, and thus also (for a long time) does not recognize the inconceivable limits he frequently surpasses.
After all, 10 episodes per season must be filled, so we gain an insight into the psychology and inner lives of other characters in the series.
Aside from that, the series is free to relate events and incidents at its own speed and even in a different order. Season two, in particular, features a number of dramatic deviations from the novel.
Above all, Joe’s new beloved love is almost entirely reintroduced into the series. While the second novel has a satisfying conclusion, the finale of the second season is definitely designed for a sequel.
2. Tv Series Based on Books – The Vampire Diaries (2009–2017)
I knew. From 2009 through 2017, the epic, blood-sucking Ménage à Trois aired 171 episodes over eight seasons, partly based on a 1990s children’s book series of the same name.
Smith would create a stylistically similar story geared for teenagers, mixing teen themes with the supernatural, inspired by the popularity of “Interview with the Vampire.” The series has a total of 13 volumes, with “Stefan’s Diaries” being based on a TV show.
The idea is usually the same: Stefan and Damon, vampire brothers, fall in love with Elena, a human, resulting in a convoluted love triangle.
Secondary characters were reworked or created from scratch for the series, and the background narrative of the Salvatore brothers differs across the novels.
The series deviates from its literary framework more and more as it progresses, especially in the later seasons.
3. Tv Series Based on Books – Big Little Lies ( 2017–2019)
What Reese Witherspoon reads, the rest of the country reads soon after. Until the decade of the tens, the nation’s book aunt was talk show star Oprah Winfrey, but now Witherspoon has taken over:
recommendations in “Reese’s Book Club” are becoming a success. Of course, Witherspoon isn’t completely selfless: she often obtains cinematic rights to the works she reads.
So the buzz is already building before the first episode, and the packaging in film and series format, like the books, is a big success. Reese is astute.
“Big Little Lies,” by Liane Morarty, was the first novel to be serialized for HBO as a series by Witherspoon’s production firm (and featuring big names like Nicole Kidman, Witherspoon himself, and, in season two, Meryl Streep).
The dark comedic story about morality, discovering one’s identity, loyalty, and appearance and reality is ideal for film adaptation: the chapters read like episodes with cliffhangers at the end.
The series stays fairly true to the original, with the exception that the plot has been relocated from a fictional tiny town on Australia’s east coast to Monterey, California, most likely to increase the realism of the social voyeurism.
By the way, the second season (which was not planned at first) is not based on any literary publishers.
4. Little Fires Everywhere (TV Mini Series 2020)
Reese Witherspoon appears to have a thing for social drama that exposes and tramples on the silliness of human connections in a precise and ruthless manner. She appears to like not just reading them, but also filming them.
In 2017, Celeste Ng’s novel of the same name spent 48 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list. It’s about the inexplicably intertwined destiny of the (seemingly) picture-book family Richardson and Black Mia and their daughter.
When Mia begins working as a domestic helper for the Richardsons, a series of tiny fires soon escalate into a massive firestorm.
The program is very similar to the book, with one major exception: Mia and her daughter are African-American in the show, but their ethnicity is never addressed in the novel.
As a result, the story gains depth and complexity by including subjects such as racism, class inequalities, and varied life ambitions. Witherspoon and Kerry Washington play the two protagonists, who are well cast.
Both in the novel and the series, the only feigned small-town idyll begins to shatter in a fascinating way, and you can’t escape the hold of the plot either there or there.
5. Sex and the City (TV Series 1998–2004)
Only die-hard fans are aware that Carrie, Miranda, Charlotte, and Samantha’s sexual adventures are based on a novel-specifically, Candace Bushnell’s novel of the same name, which not only shares the same title but also reflects the series’ sharpness, sexual promiscuity, and (almost) female empowerment.
Bushnell immediately inserted herself into the novel as Carrie Bradshaw, her alter ego. Bushnell, like Carrie, authored a column for The New York Observer called “Sex and the City.”
The columns were compiled into a book published in 1995 as a result of their remarkable success, and HBO used them as a pattern for its style and trend-setting series.
The first few episodes are heavily based on Bushnell’s columns, but as the series progresses, it introduces increasingly independent storylines that, unlike the book, also include Carrie’s friends Samantha, Miranda, and Charlotte.
6. Gossip Girl (TV Series 2007–2012)
The adolescent soap genre nearly died with the end of “The OC” in 2007, but was resurrected with a lot of elegance, style, intrigue, and trend awareness from “Gossip Girl” and kept alive for many years.
In a strict sense, we owe these first-aid techniques to Cecily Brooke von Ziegesar, the author of the same-named teen novel series in the United States.
“Gossip Girl” has pioneered new ground and gone off the established path in six seasons. This holds true for the novel as well, which has a far smaller fan base than the series.
According to admirers, the characters in the series version are more approachable, credible, and simply more pleasant.
Blake Lively and Leighton Meester, in particular, gave their clichéd and bland characters three-dimensional life (in two senses!).
In the series, the twists are also more stunning and shocking. And, unlike the television series, the book series does not reveal who Gossip Girl is at the conclusion.
7. Game of Thrones (TV Series 2011–2019)
The most successful and “greatest” series of all time, like George R. R. Martin’s Fatasy novel series “The Song of Ice and Fire,” which is also respected as a cult, transports us to a dark and ancient world filled with thirst for power, anger, revenge, intrigue, sensuality, and moral gray areas. And those cliffhangers… oh my goodness!
The first season, in particular, was heavily based on the literary source, but after that, more and more standalone stories were told-partly because Martin couldn’t keep up with the writing and the serial timeline had already gone beyond the literary timeline.
Some characters were fully reimagined for the series, while others only appeared in the novels. Significant events from the books have been retold or completely removed, and new ones have been added in their place.
Furthermore, while the war for the Iron Throne in “Game of Thrones” 2019 has already come to an (unsatisfactory) conclusion, the last novel has yet to be released. We’re all hoping for a happy ending!
8. American Gods (TV Series 2017–2021)
“American Gods” is a prestige project from Amazon Prime that merges fantasy, American folk stories, and classic and modern mythology in a beautifully constructed, inventive, and gory style.
This is also true of Neil Gaiman’s cult novel of the same name, on which the series is based, which, although released in 2001, is more current than ever because of its symbolic societal commentary and graphically breathtaking captures of the ageless zeitgeist.
This bizarre spectacle, in which sex and violence are as tightly linked as Netflix and binging, has become an art form under the direction of lateral thinker Bryan Fuller (who was also responsible for “Hannibal,” among other things).
An exaggerated jumble of strange characters, operatic staging, and convoluted tale lines that finally gave a canvas to the jumbled inner images that arise when reading Gaiman and had been difficult to categorize up to this point.
Breaking taboos and crossing borders, there is no greater way to let off steam than within the pages of a book.
It is recommended that you read the (polarizing!) novel first in order to better understand the series, which is told in a difficult manner.
9. The Handmaid’s Tale (TV Series 2017)
Margaret Atwood’s 1985 novel of the same name is today regarded as a masterpiece, with critics even comparing it to Orson Welles’ work of the century, “1984”.
The dystopian future depicted in “The Handmaid’s Tale,” in which women have no rights and are sometimes enslaved and abused as maids to compensate for the world’s low birth rate, not only raised frightening parallels and provocative hypothetical questions about the present at the time the book was published, but also convinces today with social criticism that is still valid and an exaggerated image of the patriarchal society in which we live.
June, nicknamed Desfred, is the protagonist in both the novel and the (award-winning) series, and she lets us into her private thoughts.
It is a story of feminism, but also of self-discovery and political and religious bonding that is told here and there.
However, in comparison to the book, the series goes into greater detail and has a greater emphasis on action, as well as putting other people in the limelight.
The Waterford pair, in particular, find themselves in a perpetual state of tension between friend and foe in the series, despite the fact that they are clearly portrayed as antagonists in the book.
In both the series and the novel, the year in which the action takes place is purposefully left unspecified.
10. Outlander (TV Series 2014)
The novel series “Highland Saga” by Diana Gabaldon was already well-known before the series, but it was able to regain fame thanks to the success of the series.
The film’s blend of fantasy, war drama, and tragic romance, which deftly balances kitsch with refined guilty pleasure, is favorably acclaimed.
Perhaps it is because the series adheres to the original texts so closely. In several cases, dialogues from the novel are even replicated verbatim in the series.
However, as the series progresses, the creators give themselves a bit more leeway. The premise, however, is always maintained: each season implements exactly one volume of the book series.