For me, it’s King’s “Fairy Tale”. I think it would make a great movie. Here is to hoping that Hollywood hears my prayers. Lol
We Are Legion by Dennis E. Taylor and the sequels.
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The name of the wind
More Discworld books and the entire Culture series by Banks.
I can’t believe that nothing mainly concerning the Ankh Morpork Watch has ever been produced. If nothing else, they could be the source for a great TV show, but so far nothing has ever been made. It’s weird.
The last 3 expanse novels
Man, I have these books and I never got to read them. Are they good?
This is not hyperbole:
The best science fiction story I have ever read.
The most satisfying end to an epic story I have ever read.
9 novels and an entire novel full of short stories like almost 10k pages of the most engaging story ever.
Awesome characters, hard sci fi tech, cosmic horror and it’s all relatable.
Each book is like its own contained story too and each one has a distinct flavor.
Seriously the show was cool but not perfect. Those books man. Holy cow.
Imagine if George rr. Martin actually finished a song of ice and fire.
These dudes finished their story. It’s amazing
I am going to re-read it now
Shit, then let me stop reading this slog (the wheel of time) that has been like pulling my intestines out of my mouth by a child. I’m seriously going to stop it and start reading the expanse. That’s it. I’m done. 😂
And their two new Captive’s War books, Mercy of Gods and Livesuit, are epic AF. It’s gonna be an amazing series.
The last 3
Why the last three? Are there not only three of them? I haven’t actually read them so I might have been wrong.
Rest are covered by the TV show
The first six had been made into a series on Amazon prime. (More or less)
The last 3 would be a huge challenge to do as a tv show.
Without spoiling it I cannot explain why
House of Leaves
This Is How You Lose the Time War
Seveneves by Stephenson.
Red Rising by Pierce Brown.
With the entire book series, there is plenty of material for sequels.
That series is good but not great as writing (IMO, of course) but I think would be incredible on screen. Film or high budget TV series could both work.
There have already been several attempts to adapt the series as a movie or TV series, but unfortunately nothing ever came of it.
And yes, given the scope, a series would probably be better, but it would certainly require a high budget.
The Lies of Locke Lamora
I’ve listened to those audiobooks at least three times. They’re sooo good.
Wish the author could finish the series
Yeah I’ve re-read the books three times and every time I forget how much the ending leaves you wanting more.
The Hyperion Cantos, all 4 books. Stop wasting money on Dune reboots and make something good.
I’m so sick of the reboots. Make it once and leave it alone
Both Daemon and Freedom by Daniel Suarez.
I mean, as long as they don’t butcher them like they did to, for instance, Ready Player One.
I don’t think I’ve ever seen a book not get butchered as a movie. At least as far as I know.
It will never happen but Vainqueur the Dragon has some very funny moments.
Diary. What you don’t understand you can make mean anything.
Who’s the author?
Sorry, yeah Chuck Palahniuk. Same guy who wrote Fight Club.
I assume Palahniuk
What you don’t understand you can make mean anything.
which works great in a novel. how do you make that work in a series / film setup?
I think a creative filmmaker could play with that. View the same scene from multiple perspectives, show characters (and the audience) making assumptions and drawing conclusions because they don’t have the full story. Maybe you never fully reveal what is actually happening, and let the audience fill in the gaps.
The narrative itself might not be enough to draw out a full mystery, but maybe you delve into the backstory and the supernatural elements at play a bit more. Or maybe it’s all drug induced, from the art to the mass hysteria. Maybe the townspeople assign meaning to chaos, and their faith is tested when things don’t go to plan.
But you have several interesting characters to explore, none of whom ever have all the information they need to understand everything.
The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell, although I’m not sure its subtleties could be brought to the screen.