Every book you need to read before it becomes the next ‘Game of Thrones’

Saturday, 17 August 2019 01:32 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

 

From ‘Watchmen’ to ‘His Dark Materials’ and 

‘The Witcher,’ here are 

the biggest sci-fi and 

fantasy adaptions 

heading to the screen

 

 

Esquire.com: When ‘Game of Thrones’ became the world’s biggest TV show, die-hards of the ‘A Song of Ice and Fire’ series suddenly found themselves in a strange position when it became such a pop culture phenomenon that it was socially acceptable to beef over who can and can’t ride dragons. Now, Hollywood is filling a Thrones-sized hole with more big-budget fantasy adaptations than you can swing a battleaxe at. That’s why we made a guide to soaking up all this prerequisite knowledge—so you’ll walk Middle Earth with grace this time around

‘Watchmen’ (HBO)

We know Zack Snyder’s movie has some hardcore fans, but will we finally get an adaptation of Alan Moore’s ‘Watchmen’ that everyone will like. This Damon Lindelof series may fit the bill.

Required reading: The co-creator of ‘Lost’ and ‘The Leftovers’ has said the show will be “remixed.” Still, Moore’s classic noirish superhero satire is increasingly relevant. Reread it or be baptised into it.

Advanced reading: The recent ‘Doomsday Clock’ comics (‘Watchmen’ sequels that bring Superman into the mix).

His Dark Materials (HBO)

Though Philip Pullman’s ‘His Dark Materials’ trilogy was marketed as young-adult fare, the novels are marked by more grown-up themes involving religion and sexual maturation— which you can expect HBO to dig into. (Bonus Lin-Manuel Miranda!)

Required reading: The series’ first book, ‘The Golden Compass’. For a quick, sanitised version, watch the 2007 film. Advanced reading: The final two books, or even the sequel trilogy, ‘The Book of Dust’.

The Witcher (Netflix)

Think Thrones is hard to follow? Try six Polish-language novels, three video games, and handfuls of short stories. Netflix is adapting the property as a Henry Cavill-led TV series. Required reading: Grab an English translation of ‘The Last Wish,’ which provides the basics of ‘The Witcher’ brand of medieval romp. Advanced reading: The most popular Witcher video game, ‘The Witcher 3 Wild Hunt,’ which takes up to 200 hours if you want to finish every quest. So...how’s your calendar looking?

Dune (Warner Bros.)

2020 will be the year ‘Dune’ goes mainstream. There’s a movie directed by Denis Villeneuve and starring Timothée Chalamet. And Warner Media will stream ‘Dune: The Sisterhood,’ a series about an order of female mystics. 

Required reading: While Frank Herbert’s ‘Dune’ has sold around 20 million copies, it’s still cultish compared with ‘The Lord of the Rings’. Need convincing? The book centres on the battle to control Arrakis, the sole planet containing a substance that enables users to extend their life, travel through space, and sometimes predict the future. 

Advanced reading: Loving life on Arrakis? Move on to Dune’s five sequels, plus the 14 prequels cowritten by Herbert’s son after his father’s death.

‘Game of Thrones’ prequels (HBO)

Required reading: The first book in the ‘Song of Ice and Fire’ saga. 

Advanced reading: Prequel ‘Dunk and Egg’ novellas. Try not to lose it when the show strays from the books.

‘The Kingkiller Chronicle’ (Showtime)

 Showtime is developing a series based on Patrick Rothfuss’s ‘Kingkiller Chronicle’ trilogy, which follows an adventurer/magician/lute prodigy through his medieval escapades.

Required reading: Only the first two books have been released so far, and as the show is reportedly set a generation before ‘The Name of the Wind,’ the first book is a good place to start.

Advanced reading: Pick up the second book, ‘The Wise Man’s Fear,’ when you buy the first. They’re surprisingly poetic.

‘Black Leopard, Red Wolf’ (Warner Bros.)

 Marlon James’ ‘Black Leopard, Red Wolf,’ the first novel in the planned Dark Star trilogy, has been called “the African Game of Thrones.” Michael B. Jordan secured its big-screen rights.

Required reading: ‘Black Leopard, Red Wolf,’ where a mercenary is hired to find a missing child in a journey that involves necromancers, witches, goddesses, and shape-shifters. 

Advanced reading: If you can’t wait for the next two books, read ‘A Brief History of Seven Killings,’ James’ novel about Jamaican violence that’s about to get the HBO treatment.

 

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