By CRAIG FEHRMAN - New York Times - Published: December 16, 2011
One day last April, Jennifer Egan found out that her fourth novel, “A Visit From the Goon Squad,” had won the Pulitzer Prize. A couple of days later, she got more good news — HBO wanted to turn the book into a television series.
Illustration by Mikel Jaso
Novelists have long lusted after movie adaptations. “It’s extra income,” says Egan, who’s seen one of her previous books become a movie and another get stuck in development. Recently, however, authors have found themselves pursued less by Hollywood than by HBO. The cable network has optioned a number of widely recognized literary works, including Karen Russell’s “Swamplandia!,” Chad Harbach’s “Art of Fielding” and Mary Karr’s memoirs. “At some point in the last year,” says Michael London, the indie-approved producer whose Groundswell Films brought “Goon Squad” to HBO, “everyone in the business had an epiphany that the DNA of cable television has much more in common with novels than movies do.”
This makes sense. After all, what people like about post-“Sopranos” cable TV — its complexity, its density, its moral ambiguity or even depravity — lines up with what they like about literary fiction. (It doesn’t hurt that Hollywood seems less interested than ever in serious fare.) What may be surprising, though, is how many authors are working on their own shows. “It’s not just that novels make good adaptations,” London says. “It’s that novelists make good adapters.” Right now, prominent writers are creating original cable series (Salman Rushdie, Sam Lipsyte, Gary Shteyngart, and Michael Chabon and Ayelet Waldman) or adapting their own books (Jonathan Franzen and “The Corrections,” Tom Perrotta and “The Leftovers”). And while many of these writers have dabbled in screenplays, their rush to cable represents something new. Novelists who used to lament the rise of television now want a chance to write for it, and that says something about the evolution of cable TV — and maybe about the evolution of literary authorship.
Full essay at the New York Times.
This makes sense. After all, what people like about post-“Sopranos” cable TV — its complexity, its density, its moral ambiguity or even depravity — lines up with what they like about literary fiction. (It doesn’t hurt that Hollywood seems less interested than ever in serious fare.) What may be surprising, though, is how many authors are working on their own shows. “It’s not just that novels make good adaptations,” London says. “It’s that novelists make good adapters.” Right now, prominent writers are creating original cable series (Salman Rushdie, Sam Lipsyte, Gary Shteyngart, and Michael Chabon and Ayelet Waldman) or adapting their own books (Jonathan Franzen and “The Corrections,” Tom Perrotta and “The Leftovers”). And while many of these writers have dabbled in screenplays, their rush to cable represents something new. Novelists who used to lament the rise of television now want a chance to write for it, and that says something about the evolution of cable TV — and maybe about the evolution of literary authorship.
Full essay at the New York Times.