What book that hasn't been adapted into a TV show or movie do you think deserves an adaptation?

merari42@lemmy.world to Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world – 158 points –
277

Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy deserves a good adaptation, rather than that trash movie and that too short BBC series.

I would love that, I dont think the movie is terrible, its just that everything after Ford and Arthur get thrown out the airlock isnt as funny or absurd as the books. The main issue is the first 2ish books are unadaptable because there is no central conflict (or arleast the main cast dosent care or know there was supposed to be one).

Zaphod is the only person with motivation to do anything other than to continue existing, and he is unaware (or dosen't care) he is being hunted until they meet those suprisingly progessive law enforcment officers on Magrathea and when he visits the guides publishing offices.

And it should be of the first three books, not just the first book.

The BBC series does up to them being on >!prehistoric hairdresser and middle management earth!< Iirc

Which I'm pretty sure is the third book. But I haven't read it in a loooooong time.

Wha… really? I’ve seen the BBC HHGTTG, but I’ve never even heard they did the sequels!

Book 2 was Restaurant at the End of the Universe, and book 3 was Life, the Universe, and Everything.

Two books followed… So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish and Mostly Harmless constituted Books 4 & 5, but were detached from the main characters and plot.

  • Hyperion Cantos.

  • Neuromancer.

For being what I would consider one of the founding fathers of cyberpunk, I'm surprised there hasn't been a Neuromancer film yet. Especially when so many of the tropes we know from the cyberpunk genre originated from Neuromancer, to begin with.

The question is do they stick with the existing Johnny Mnemonic movie as the prequel story, recap it in an intro scene, or ignore it completely?

I think neuromancer is being done? Maybe it's something else tho I forget

Neuromancer has been optioned before but no one did anything with it. I think it was in play again but recently but haven't heard much lately.

Hyperion Cantos would be great.

Gormanghast might also be cool.

The first book seems ideal for a mini series

An anthology-like mini series where each episode deals with one pilgrim and is written and directed by different people. As many different styles as there are pilgrims, just like how the book is written. Would translate very well to screen IMO.

Watch Inception and think of Neuromancer and you will find that its probably the best closest match for the way the story is told. So many things made me realize there are so many little "I loved that story but I cant make that movie so I will just give you clues". The throwing star is the top.

Always felt like that Eragon series could have been good. Too bad they never made a movie for it. Never once. I'm sure it would have been solid if they had. But they didn't.

I think they are making an Eragon adaptation (for the first time, of course). I think Disney+ is making a series, similar to them restarting Percy Jackson.

Oh boy. Disney adaptation track record is very hit or miss. I hope they don't mess this one up like the last adaptation.

Ah, it appears you have forgotten or have simply Mandela'd in from a different timeline. Allow me to refresh your memory for you in the kindest way possible:

Eragon was a 2006 dance film featuring Jeremy Irons and Ed Speeler on a ship. Some fighting is involved. And I dunno, a dragon maybe.

I feel the same way about Avatar: The Last Airbender. It would have been such an amazing movie, or perhaps even a series. But alas, they've never attempted it once.

Every single thing Brandon Sanderson ever wrote

The graphic audiobooks are pretty great already. Would love some visuals to go with it. Would need a big budget though..

Similarly, I'm reading through the Lightbringer series by Brent Weeks and I think it would be a great candidate for an adaptation. It's a really good story and the magic is all based on the colour of light which I think would make the special effects pretty easy to create and should also look nice.

The Iliad. Not a "take" or an "adaptation" or a "re-imagining". Just play it straight as it is, cut out some of the monologues and replace the "throwing spears at each other" parts with swordfights.

I want to see the gods descend from Olympus to fight on the battlefield.

The Long Earth by Terry Pratchett and some guy who's name is harder to remember.

An inventor uploads a schematic to the Internet for a cheap, easy-to-assemble device that lets anyone (or almost anyone) "step" into parallel earths. A nearly infinite stretch of untamed wilderness sees people abandoning the polluted, crowded, government-run Old Earth in search of new opportunities. The catch: No iron or iron alloys can "step" across, sending these new earths back to the bronze age.

Also: Zeppelins that are also reincarnated Buddhists that are also the first true machine intelligence; robot cats; libertarian communes; sapient nonhuman primates; sapient nonhuman non-primates; radioactive ziggurats; space programs to parallel moons; and grumpy survival chicks.

Stephen Baxter

The premise was better than the execution, but I've definitely been curious if you could use the world stepping premise in an RPG in a compelling way.

Old Man's War by John Scalzi was made for this, I swear. His latest books also read a lot like movie scripts are contained therein.

Charles Stross' Laundry series has a ton of potential too, if less Chtullu is required, I wouldn't mind a Merchant Princes series either.

I heard rumours about Forever War being optioned at some point, but nothing came of it.

I had thought that some Hollywood people were talking to Scalzi about Old man’s war, but nothing ever came of it. Sad.

Sanderson's Mistborn series could make some good film or TV. Honestly they could probably even pull off a whole cosmere MC universesque type thing... Although I think deals keep falling through because the author wants full creative control.

Although I think deals keep falling through because the author wants full creative control.

I mean looking at the ruins of the Game of Thrones franchise that David Benioff and D. B. Weiss left behind, maybe that's not such a bad idea.

Ringworld :)

The original TSR Dragonlance D&D series from the '80s by Weis and Hickman.

At least we finally seem to be beyond people wondering why Drizzt isn't around.

This is what I was looking for. Sure, we have a crappy animated movie, but all I have ever wanted was to see the Heroes of the Lance in real life.

I would have loved Name of the Wind, but that lazy fuck Rothfuss is going the way of George Reorge Reorge Martin: he's been promising book 3 for a decade and can't finish it.

Any of the Discworld series by Terry Pratchett

There are a couple animated adaptations of some of the books, and the live-action adaptation of Hogfather is pretty good!

There's also a Sky One live action of Color of Magic and Going Postal that are pretty solid.

Edit: Thanks Madjo!

I would love a true to the book series of World War Z. I’m not even sure anyone involved with that movie read the book. It should be a 3 season HBO series with an episode for each persons vignette. Intros and outros of each episode has the recurring reporter meeting the person and starting his recording as they launch into their narrative of what happened. If you need more episodes, just write additional vignettes. Season 1 is the events that lead up to the outbreak, season 2 is the war itself, season 3 is the aftermath. I’m pretty sure this is what Max Brooks was writing towards. It could be amazing.

I've been saying this for years. It's ideal for a series. Was terribly disappointed with that zombie movie that borrowed the name.

The Dark Tower.

Whatever that monstrosity they released a few years ago was doesn't count.

Infinite Jest. Just for the sheer impossibility of any attempt to do so :-)

I've lost faith in adaptations of books

I don't mind it if it's a labour of misguided love, like Stephen King's many many many hit-or-miss film adaptations pre-2020.

I do mind being told repeatedly that I should like it by viral media, it being overhyped to the point of ridiculousness, it being given the full red carpet treatment by one of the two main studios, and then when I actually watch it it's been changed to suit some audience mass appeal (e.g. make the clown scarier / less scary / not like that) .

I guess what I'm saying is, I like it when books are adapted into films where the director can do whatever the hell they want, for good or for worse, without the studio whipping them to appeal to the mass audience, many who weren't even fans until they were told to be 5 minutes ago.

Almost anything from Neal Stephenson.

Oh shit. The Baroque Cycle getting the Game of Thrones treatment... minus the executive meddling.

You wouldn't even have to obsess over the history, alchemy, etc., just don't fuck it up. People get too wrapped around an axle thinking every single infodump has to be there. Stephenson's got issues (coughendingscough), but the stories are informed by the same research as the infodumps, and they'll hold up well.

Seveneves is coming as a series. Not sure if they could pull off Baroque, but I'm game. I'd love a Snow Crash film.

Typing that comment made me do my semi-annual check for adaptations, and I just saw that announcement came out a couple of weeks ago. Hope it comes along better than the movie that got stuck in development hell.

A well-done Brothers Karamazov could put your Downton Abbeys and Bridgertons to shame.

Maybe call it "Three Brothers..."

The Red Rising series would be an awesome TV show. Each of the 6 (so far) books would be excellent as long seasons.

I kinda fell off after book 3.

Book 4 is a bit slow but it picks up a lot after that.

That said don't feel obligated to read something that Doesn't interest you of course

You ask as if that was a good thing. Like an honor for a book. But I way too often find myself defending books with "It's nothing like the movie. Don't juge it by the awful movie."

Especially fantasy adaptions are regularly awful and damaging for the books.

Examples: The Dark Tower, Eragon, Percy Jackson, The Giver, Inkheart.
Netflix's Persuasion, The Beach to name a couple of non fantasy as well.

So I'd rather they leave the books alone and make original stories into movies.

After the Dark Tower movie came out, I heard a whole bunch of people on the internet saying that the movie was awful and the books are so much better. I didn’t see the movie, but if the books are so well-liked I thought I’d give them a try.

I tried my best, I really did. But I just couldn’t finish the first book. It was just way too surreal and abstract for me.

You are not alone in this. The first book is awful. It made me doubt my english reading comprehension. Everybody hates it.

It's unfortunate, that such a great series starts off with the worst book, not only of the series, but imo of all of Kings books.
Somehow the real story starts (for me) with the second book. The first is more of a world introduction, a world building tool. And otherwise quite irrelevant.

I urge you, to give the second book (The drawing of the three) a chance. You won't regret it, because if you disregard the first book, the series is fantastic.

I generally prefer to start series from the very beginning so I don’t miss anything, but I think I’ll go pick up that second book and give the series another try.

The second book begins with a kind of forword that summarises all relevant details of the first book.

Try reading it alongside the podcast the KingSlingers. The podcast is set up where they read a couple chapters at a time, then spend a 2 hours talking about those chapters. One person read the series multiple times and the other is just reading it for the first time. I'm halfway through the series, and now I want them to break down and discuss every book I read.

You said it better than i ever could. Starting at Jurassic Park, and going all the way to The Wheel of Time, just keep Hollywood away from my literature!

Old Man's War

Tom Godwin's The Survivors, it's pretty short so they could do their thing where they always mess with the story and it wouldn't have much effect.

Asimov's Robots stories, particularly those with Powell and Donovan, US Robots, etc could be the basis for a cool series, ideally retro-futuristic...

Any Batman story that focuses more on how he's mainly a detective and only breaks out the concussion gloves if he's attacked or there's literally no other way to resolve the situation at hand?

Society thinks he's The Punisher in a funny hat because of those damned nolanverse films.

He was supposed to do some detective work in The Batman movie, right? It's been awhile since I've seen it, though, so I don't remember how much they fulfilled that promise.

They did, and though it was a short segment, it was good

I mean theoretically, but it was crap like everything else in that film. He figured nothing out on his own

Hyperion series. That thing's gonna be hard to adapt though.

Blood Meridian (decades of false starts not withstanding).

One of my faves. I've never understood why people say it's impossible to adapt.

Because a huge chunk of the story is wandering the gorgeous, but empty desert with a bunch of psycho killers. Occasionally that group commits grisly large scale harvesting of passable scalps to sell off to bigger towns with a scalp trade. Sometimes one of them, usually the judge, will commit a little extra horrific crime against humanity as a treat for themselves. The "good guy" isn't exactly someone to root for either. It's a story with muddy, dark morals and an ending that'll bum out a lot of folks. No happy days here.

I loved the story and would watch a well done movie about it. I highly doubt that'll happen. To do it right is to include almost all of the horror of what these people are, which would be a lot of money on effects that will anger a ton of people due to what they portray. It's not that it's unadaptable. It's that it would be a slow burn movie with brief, hyper violent hollowing out of small villages including baby smashing. It's slow, mean, and ends in a way that'll have you stare off into space feeling a little bad about the nature of humanity. Not a very profitable idea for a movie.

What's your ideal cast lineup? I want this live action so bad but it would have to be a mini series to get all of it in, and then can never think of anyone who could bring the Judge to life.

Stellan Skarsgård as Judge would be terrifying. Not sure a out accent.

if he had the body of a WWE wrestler like The Big Show. The Judge is suppose to be a monster of a man, 6'7 and 270, with no hair and a baby like face

The Kiefer Sutherland from The Young Guns era as the Kid

House of leaves.

Any advice on how to actually get through this book? I love it but it's very challenging.

Take as long as you feel like, and try not to focus on "getting through" the book. On my first read, I was lucky enough to feel like I couldn't put it down. I tried a second time years later and didn't get very far, I think because I was focused on finishing it.

Hard to imagine it being done well, given not only the plot(s) but the...unique narrative structure.

They need to do a good Dark Tower series. Make it a mini-series or a series of films.

The question was what hasn't been made. Dark Tower was attempted.

That movie had very little to do with the actual story aside from a few references. And without Eddie, Susannah, and a well-danced Commala I’ll never be satisfied.

Ok, but...

Okay smarty pants… then I’ll happily point out the “Dark Tower” book is the final book, which wasn’t even really covered at all except for tertiary references to breakers. So, an adaptation for each of those that precede it? Does that pass muster?

Yes but the question was about books rhat haven't been made into movies should be, NOT what movies failed to do the book justice. If that was the question there would be a long, LONG list of movies that failed their source.

Yes, and as I suggest below, no adaptation has been made for all the books in the series. A movie named after the last book but seemingly not based on any of them was made. It shares a name with one of several books but that is all the is shared. So there are several books in the series to adapt.

Any Brandon Sanderson books of course.

Ayyyyyyyyyyyy my boy Brando Sando!

Time for !BooksCircleJerk

One of my favorite books is called Inherit the Stars.

Mankind is starting to reach out into the solar system, but finds a man on the moon entombed in a space suit, and he's been dead for 50,000 years.

It'd make a pretty good movie, 2 hours tops.

It does one of my favorite things, by strongly blending two genres: mystery, and sci-fi. A sci-fi show, movie, or book that's purely sci-fi is rarely good. Same goes for fantasy. Season 1 of Game of Thrones is good because it's primarily a mystery/drama story in a fantasy setting. A New Hope is great because it's a western, coming-of-age story in a sci-fi setting. Rebel Moon is garbage (for many reasons) because it's pure sci-fi schlock with no nuance.

Not a book, but a true story from WW2:

5 May 1945 Troops of the 23rd Tank Battalion of the 12th Armored Division of the US XXI Corps led by Lieut. John C. "Jack" Lee, Jr., a number of Wehrmacht soldiers led by Major Josef "Sepp" Gangl, SS-Hauptsturmführer Kurt-Siegfried Schrader, and recently freed French prisoners of war defended Castle Itter against an attacking force from the 17th SS Panzergrenadier Division until relief from the American 142nd Infantry Regiment of the 36th Division of XXI Corps arrived.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Castle_Itter?wprov=sfla1

dude i read this comment like three times and still don't know what the fuck is going on. can you do it with fewer meaningless names and numbers

US and Germans (with some French celebrity prisoners) fight other Germans. My favorite part of this battle is when the French superstar Tennis player vaults a castle wall and runs through enemy lines to ask for reinforcements.

Assassin's trilogy by Robin Hobb.

Agreed, fantastic story but I'll be damned if I wasn't moved to tears.

Hey, Robin! I know you have to vent sometimes into your works, but give the poor guy a break, won't you?

The Lies of Locke Lamora is just begging for an Ocean's Eleven-type treatment.

I was about to post the same thing. That series is fucking awesome

Is the rest of the series good? I read the first one and thought it was pretty good but a reasonably well wrapped up story by the end

I really liked it, the three are pretty different. There's supposed to be a fourth and more but it's kinda in the r.r. Martin situation

Good to know! I'll add it to the ever growing list

Lot of good ones in here. Only idea I can think of is The Black Company. Not specifically to follow Croakers story either. Could be about battles and drama of the past from the annals.

Goblin and One-Eye would be fucking awesome as the main characters, or Raven. Hell even a story about how the Silver Spike came to be would be a good movie.

No fuck that Croaker is the bad ass mofo and his story should be the first movie. Make it an unknown actor who can be humble but also a bad mofo who everyone is like JFC dude!

If you did a TV series it could be like True Detective. Each season being a different timeframe. The Taken being the few reoccurring characters. But even then a character like Shifter could be portrayed by multiple actors.

The Moon is a Harsh Mistress is my favourite book and would be highly relevant today given its political themes about colonialism, and AI.

Lord of Light, high sci Fi mashed with epic Indian mythology and eastern philosophy.

The Rama Series by Arthur C Clarke

I think this is a good contender for the show being better than the book (which was incredibly dry Sci-Fi with almost no character content).

That's just the first book. The other 3 books were much larger and had plenty of character content.

Honestly, I didn't bother with the other three after reading the poor reviews for it, maybe I'll give them a go.

Edit: Actually, I've read the second one, which was definitely better. I just have read that the last two ain't too great.

It's one of my favourite series of all time. Worth another go.

Dragonlance

Seconded, but I'm not sure I would go past the twins trilogy

Based on Honor Among Thieves there simply isn't enough of an audience. Dragonlance does a better job of hiding the dice but I don't think high fantasy can get away with not having boobs and murder everywhere.

A good version of “Riverworld” by Philip Jose Farmer would be awesome. “Borne” or “The Strange Bird” by Jeff Vandermeer. “Dance, Dance, Dance” by Murakmi. The Maddaddam Trilogy by Atwood.

As a deep cut, “The Woman in the Dunes” by Kobo Abe. Totally surreal.

Little brother by cory Doctorow Best book ive read. Characters have real feelings and flaws. And the book got me deep into linux and foss

Would highly recommend

Doctorow releases his books under a CC license as well, so you can download a copy here.

The Chronicles of Amber by Roger Zelazny

It needs to be a show, not movies. One book per season would allow enough detail to be included.

These books changed how I read books and understood books. They were a gateway into other worlds I never knew could exist.

Yes! I came here to see if anyone had mentioned this. My favorite fantasy series when I was a teenager. I also wouldn't mind his Incarnations of Immortality series turned into a show either, but Amber would work better due to the humor and settings

Call me crazy, but I want a 14 hour epic of The Silmarillion...one movie, not a trilogy plz.

14 hours is way way way too long of a movie. Multiple movies or a series makes much more sense.

But yeah, that would be really cool.

Oh absolutely, no one will sit through an actual movie that long. A series of some would be the way to go for sure.

silmarillion is tv series material. every episode a mythic story, with some two-parters.

As an aside I found it surprisingly readable and I'm not a huge LotR fan. Maybe I just like short story anthologies.

I thought it was pretty terrible tbh, and I read history books for fun. I think that was my problem with it tbh, I just kept looking at the timelines and going "no, bullshit, the kingdom would have been bankrupted by a five hundred year war, and how tf are elves replacing their combat losses?"

and how tf are elves replacing their combat losses?"

Maybe they are horny

Would love to see (and probably be disappointed by) a Revelation Space adaptation.

I think diamond dogs would make a really interesting animation short or maybe full-length movie.

But any of the books from the main series would require the kind of love and effort that the Expanse got early on.

But any of the books from the main series would require the kind of love and effort that the Expanse got early on.

I don't know that any series would ever get that kind of love ever again. What The Expanse got was rare and amazing.

That's kind of my fear and given how kind of hard science fiction Rev space is. I think it would really suffer if it got the generic space treatment that most of Hollywood considers adequate for science fiction.

Knowing Hollywood they would skip over the entire relativistic aspect of the universe. Or like altered carbon miss some of the depth and nuance of the social commentary.

Dan Simmons, Hyperion... Or Carrion Comfort.

I'd love to see some modern tries at Dashiel Hammet's work too.

I so want a Hercules/Xena type show except it's Conan. The world needs more Conan in all its glory steeped in fantasy and Lovecraftian lore.

Now I'm picturing Conan O'Brien portraying Conan The Barbarian, and I don't like it.....

Dresden files not popular among these parts or how come nobody's mentioned it yet?

It has technically already been adapted, but it was a stupid procedural cop show with a twist rather than what it should be. If you want a more formulaic thing, just copy Amazon's Reacher.

Plus, since it's an urban fantasy, it should be cheaper to make than most other fantasy/sci-fi shows, I think.

The bone comic book series by Jeff Smith completely deserves a movie or show or something. The series is like Tolkien + Disney +metaphysics and is aimed at a younger audience but has enough deep ideas to keep adults actively interested. It has a rich history of the 90s-00s comic book era as well as some history in acholastic book fairs as well as some early internet meme culture contribution. It was solely owned by one dude who eventually got some help from someone who added color to the series that really made it a next level up. If anyone decides to read it from my comment here, check out the omnibus version and if you can find a 20th anniversary version, that has some nice history and behind the scenes type stuff included. There was a Netflix series that was in the works for like a year or so until Netflix decided to cancel it, so it already has some kind of an interest that I hope keeps building up and eventually makes someone do something about this forgotten gem. Here's a explainer video about bone Bone comic series explainer video

I thought the telltale video game adaptation was interesting!

But yeah, a full epic series would be something else

Yeah it's odd how all these companies are just letting it slip through the cracks like this

Peter Hamilton's nights dawn trilogy, and his commonwealth saga. Both really good space opera, with varied characters and plot lines.

Yes, absolutely agree. The Commonwealth Saga was what got me into space operas big time

Although probably need to get someone in to handle the female characters - writing women is not his strong point...

Brutally evident on my recent re-read after a decade’s break

Red Mars, Kim Stanley Robinson

Honestly, no one could do it justice. But I agree it would deserve a great adaptation

There's so much going on, a TV show would have to be 10 seasons. Love the combo of socio-political struggles and hard sci fi technology though.

The Devil in the White City - would love to see the Chicago Worlds Fair brought to life in all it's splendor, and to be directly contrasted with the horror that was HH Holmes murder castle. The book brought that history to life so vividly, and I feel like mini series with great casting would do incredibly well.

The 7 1/2 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle - mysteries and whodunnits are popular again (thank god) and this one has such an interesting premise. When I first read it I was convinced it would be a great video game. But a movie would also be a hit.

Something Wicked this way Comes - not sure if this has ever been adapted, but I've never seen it. The book is so atmospheric and has such a rich cast of characters. We haven't had a movie that really celebrates the moodiness of autumn in a while.

There was a 1983 adaptation of Something Wicked that Bradbury was involved with and liked. Honestly it didn't do much for me though.

Dresden files would be a fantastic HBO style series. They tried a TV adaption in the past but it was trash

I have so much of this fancasted in my head

Clancy Brown as Morgan
Ray Wise as Nicodemus
Mia Goth as Aurora
Naveen Andrews as The Gatekeeper
Young Ray Wise as Marcone (just let me have this lmao)

I guess its kinda fringe but the Vorkosigan Saga by Lois McMaster Bujold. Either the parents or little admiral would be pretty good if she is involved in the writing. Or, one of her other books. Great writer.

After how the Withcher was butchered, I'd like to see less adaptations.

Yeah, I don't trust them not to ruin everything. Disney fucked up Star Wars for fucks sake. If there was ever a sure thing it was that and they somehow managed to make half their shows terrible.

I mentioned Daemon and Freedom^TM^ by Daniel Suarez in another thread recently. I've often thought they'd make good Techno Thrillers. They got optioned once but I think it expired.

I think part of the problem is that the second book is a conclusion to the first. One falls flat without the other. So I think they'd be best suited to a single mini-series of 6 or 8 hour long episodes. And studios want franchises.

His more recent series starting with Delta V would be excellent too. Even Kill Decision would make a great techno-thriller series.

Monstrous Regiment by Terry Pratchett. I think that would be a great book to adapt.

I’d like to see any adaptations of any of the Watch books. Any at all.

Shame they never made a TV series about the Discworld Watch...

Massive shame. Those characters are ripe for it. C’mon BBC, get to it!

Remove most of the muscle porn from it, which wouldn't be hard since the main characters are all essentially superheroes, and the entirety of The Deathworlders, the canon parts of Salvage, The Xiu Chang Saga, and Humans Dont Make Good Pets.

The Jenkinsverse has a ton of potential there.

ETA: also a documentary narrated by David Attenborough, based on Alice in Sunderland.

Camp Damascus by Chuck Tingle. I was expecting a trashy slasher with some queer elements and an autistic protagonist, what I got was a good supernatural thriller with some queer elements and a very believable autistic protagonist - I would genuinely recommend it.

The writing is the weakest part, it feels very kind of pedestrian, like "here's some words explaining what's happening" rather than being artistic or beautiful or evocative but it's good enough for the story and characters to come through, and they're great. So remove the writing quality from the equation and it could be absolutely excellent

I've been listening to Pushing Ice by Alastair Reynolds thanks to a recommendation I saw here on Lemmy. This is one that I'd like to see a movie or series adaptation.

The Bobiverse would be a fun series I think as well.

I'd like to see Ian McDonald's River of Gods or The Dervish House made into a 10ep series. They're both fantastic cyberpunk books and would make excellent TV.

Also, absolute long shot here but I'd love to see Iain Banks' The Culture series adapted for premium streaming with a Foundation series budget.

The Girl from Earths End By Tara Dairman

It's like Harry Potter if you replace magic with botany, and JK Rowling's shittiest values with the opposite of that.

Also fair warning it will make you cry

The Sword of Truth series. My favorite series of all time. It had an attempt at a show, but I refuse to accept it. They took a story that's 10x more adult than Game of Thrones and made a CW show that had events from the 5th book in episode one.

No hate, but you’re the first person I’ve heard say it was their favourite. I enjoyed the first few books, but dude went off the deep end in later books. Became damn near unreadable for me. And I think majority of readers have similar views. I doubt any attempt would survive the hate and t would receive.

That's fair, I get it's not for everyone but I truly did enjoy it and the little book club my with my friends liked it. Granted I like those types of worlds. Mistborn, Wheel of Time, etc. But book 5 was by far my favorite entry, I've reread it by itself. I'm honestly curious what you started to dislike about them, just to understand that take on em, if you're willing to take the time.

No offense taken if it's not for you, or hell even most people, but man I would love to see it done justice in cinema, I just see so much potential there.

It’s been a long while since I read it, but each book got a little bit more pretentious with the author shoe horning his own world view into the readers face. That was annoying, but even more so because I recall disagreeing with his view quite a bit.

Also, each book was essentially the same plot. Universe works to keep the two protagonists apart, a bunch of fucked up shit happens, and at the end of the books they’re back together having learned nothing.

But the real issue I had with the later works was the very real Mary Sue of the two protagonists. Those characters just could do everything. It got boring and stale after a couple books of it.

I still hold Sword of Truth to be a good book by itself. And I do recall liking the next two books at least. But as a whole, I do not think it’s good storytelling.

Wow, thanks for taking the time and sharing all that!

The only thing I could think of is The Order and their concept that if you have and others don't you should be forced to give to them. I think it's an interesting political view, but I took at as the way the Dream Walker built and consolidated power, not a remark on the real world at all. But I could just be naive about it.

I would disagree about the second paragraph. I mean one book doesn't even have any of the main chars in it till the very end. Then you have a lot of content around multiple groups or people they are going after.

I can %100 understand the issue with the plot armor and ability to handle anything that comes up. Richard is made out to be this mega character that is essentially God, which does make some of the conflict feel weak. I can totally appreciate that.

Well thanks for typing all that out and talking the time to break down your feelings on it. I'm always curious about how others see things I've built an attachment to that can blind you a little sometimes. I still stand by loving them, warts and all, but I'd never cast shade on anyone who doesn't.

Nobody wants to mention the Malazan Empire series? That's probably fair since chances are good someone would screw it up royally.

I already get confused in the malazan series due to lack of exposition or background. No way in hell would that work as a movie or TV show.

The Aubrey/Maturin series by Patrick O'Brian - yes, I know there's been a movie (Master & Commander with Russel Crowe and Paul Bettany) but the series is much richer and deeper than any single movie could be.

Also, Robin Hobb's Realm of the Elderlings series. Concentrate on the Fitz storyline, maybe give the Liveship series a miss.

*Not until the books, plural, and the She-Wolves of Winterfell are published. Please grrm.

ha, well, wild cards is kinda ancient and has enough volumes out to not require him in really any capacity

I would love a faithful adaptation of Worm, but I don't think it could ever do the series justice.

There already has been a movie (L.A. Confidential), which is one of my favourite movies of all time. But to get it on the screen required a lot of rewriting to fit a complex weave of plots that intersect and takes 10 years to resolve. It was brilliantly done for what it was, but it left a LOT on the floor.

I would love love love to see an HBO or similar series that is as true to the novel by James Ellroy as it could possibly be.

There's a book called Robopocalypse where an AI gains sentience and then takes control of basically all robotics/anything connected to the internet to take over the world and I'd love to see that as a mini series.

Michael Morecocks Eternal Champion saga. Great candidate for a Netflix animation

Just don't say Elric since we know how they screwed us over on his ripoff.

Lord Valentine’s Castle series by Robert Silverberg

Zero. It totally destroys everything about a book. I have found though that horrible series can make good TV. Like Twilight or Dexter or Harry Potter. Horribly written trash but popular with those in the center of the bell curve.

In my opinion, the book is almost alway "better" but they're different. A show or movie can be more entertaining for the unit of time you spend on it, but you'll be reading a lot longer. It can also introduce new people to great books. For example, how many people read the Game of Thrones series after the show started?

Movies/shows can be great, especially for well written stories. They have to be different than the books, because they have less time and actually have to re-create what the book only has to describe. They are a good part of the entertainment ecosystem, and even if the book is better. Alternative versions existing do not harm the book. They can exist together.

The Gap Cycle series

LOL IDK how you would do the first book or even touch on that part of the books (because it makes them very very hard to suggest let alone reread) but once you got to the singularity bomb at the science space station deep in a dense asteroid field.... I wanna see that part. The emotions that the story creates in the characters is pretty primal and believable. Its an interesting story how each of the main characters goes through the same level of violation but in different ways

Choose Your Own Adventure

If you want to head right skip to 27:00, if you want to head left skip to 13:35

Not a book exactly, but East of West would make for some great narrative and world building.

Low Town and its sequels, especially She Who Waits. They're by Daniel Polansky and not my typical reads but dang were they good.

Random Acts Of Senseless Violence by Jack Womack.

From comic books, Bitch Planet and Archer And Armstrong.

Stranger in a strange land

For the chaos

Ah yes

Euphoria but written by the guy who told the kids in Euphoria to get off his lawn when they were 10

Discworld work make an incredible series of movies. I think D&D Honor Amongst Theives proves that modern comedy fantasies can work great in a movie format.

My other choice would be House of the Scorpion.

Occult and esoteric books in general, such as "The Kybalion" (Hermeticism), "The Book of the Dead" (Egyptian), "Liber AL vel Legis" (by Aleister Crowley, Thelema), as well as grimoires (such as the "Book of Saint Cyprian"). While there are tons of movies and TV Series that directly adapts biblical stories, I feel that there are so few (if there's any) cinematographic works adapting esoteric, occult, pagan books (from belief systems such as Gnosticism, Wicca, Rosicrucianism, Hermeticism, Luciferianism, Thelema, Goëtia, and so on). I even tried to ask AIs to list movies and TV series adapting such books, and every single listed movie (such as The Matrix) is not a direct adaptation. They don't even mention these books (in best cases, The Matrix merely alludes to hermetic principles such as "the Universe is Mental" (i.e. the scene between Neo and the kid that says that "the spoon doesn't exist").

Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six. Could be a fun mini series to adapt. The video game never grabbed me though.

Slightly off topic, but the latest episode of the What Went Wrong podcast is about the adaptation of American Psycho from novel to film and I'm quite enjoying it.

Honor Harrington might be good on a big screen in the present political climate. (Female lead plus a cat)

The myth adventures might be right for a different flavor of comedy.

The Grand Tour novels from Ben Bova. All about mankinds spread into the solar system. There are some anachronisms here and there that would need to be ironed out, and plenty of continuity errors to fix, but overall a very exciting series of stories.

Deserves? Not sure, but I feel like Gideon will get one. It seems pretty popular.

Maybe? So much of the story is wrapped up in perspective. It would definitely lose a lot in any adaptation.

I've actually never read it, but it seems pretty popular. I see a lot of people doing cosplays of it. To my knowledge it seems like one of the few books without any non-print adaptation that gets cosplayers. But that could just be because it's very recognizable lol.

Damsel.

When I heard about the Netflix movie I initially thought it was an adaptation of the book...

At this point, I want a movie adaptation just out of spite to see how much better it would be than the complete trash that netflix thought would make a good original story. I do highly recommend the book, too.

House of blades / travelers gate series by will wight.

Surprisingly cool YA / RPG ish without being gamey and too cringe.

Would be a very cool show if not done on CB

"Fierce Invalids Home from Hot Climates" by Tom Robbins. I always thought Phillip Seymour Hoffman would be the perfect protagonist.

The Traveler by John Twelve Hawks.

He is a little fucking nuts but the book is fun.

The Megastructure Compendium as an Anthology about life around these massive feats of engineering.

V. E. Schwab - the Invisible Life of Adie LaRue would be amazing. Classic cursed immortal living through the ages, but without vampires!

Fritz Leiber's short story "A Pail of Air".

This story portrays the effects of the most terrifying natural calamity I have ever encountered in fiction: Earth being ejected from the solar system. In any other disaster there's still hope because even though humanity might die out, life on Earth would eventually recover. Not so in this case. Without the Sun we're fucked. Even the air freezes (hence the title).

Repairman Jack. But reserve the supernatural stuff at the end of the seasons. I just want to watch his "repairs"

I would love to see a sword of truth series, but not done as an action thriller with shallow characters, because that’s just not what it is, damnit.

Mountain Man: 10 Books by Keith C. Blackmore. Basically, the Zombie Apocalypse happens and a Dude tries to survive alone, physically, mentally and emotionally while also trying to go on supply runs, running into Zombies and generally trying to stay alive while coping with everything. I think it would be good to have some other zombie-related Series that isn't The Walking Dead.

Expeditionary Force: 18 Books by Craig Alanson. Earth and Humanity are attacked by Hamster Aliens, another alien Race, Lizards, who attack the hamsters saving Earth in the process and then recruiting Humanity into a war on a galactic scale but the Hamsters aren't the real enemy of Humanity. I'm only at the end of the 5th Audiobook but they are great and I would really wish Skippy is voiced by the Audiobook Narrator R.C. Bray in a TV adaption.

Kyralia series: Been a while since I read it but a fantastic series related to magic By Trudi Canavan, I think there are just not enough good Magic-related Shows.

Tales of the Otori: A 5-Book Series by Lian Hearn is set in a fictional feudal Japan. The Main story follows a Boy, Takeo, through his life to avenge his adoptive father and escape the legacy of his biological father. Probably the only series in which I had to put down the book at one point and just had to process what was happening.

I have a vision that I think would be really cool for this type of adaptation but the only one I really care about is way too good to just put it up on the internet so that my idea can get stolen without credit.

The entire 2001: A Space Odyssey series should be a TV show.

Blood Meridian

I don't think this is impossible to adapt. I don't even think it needs a huge budget. If you could nail the cinematography; be comfortable with long sections w/o dialogue; and resist the urge to re-work the pacing you could have something. Think Barry Lindon(1975) but as an ultra-violent Western.

The Cohen bros. proved that McCarthy can be adapted in this way. Think of the opening scene of "No Country For Old Men"(2007).