
The Wonder
2022 • Drama, Mystery • R
Haunted by her past, a nurse travels from England to a remote Irish village in 1862 to investigate a young girl's supposedly miraculous fast.
Runtime: 1h 48m
Why you should read the novel
If you crave a truly immersive experience, Emma Donoghue’s novel The Wonder provides richer insights into 19th-century Ireland and the spiritual, social, and psychological forces shaping its story. Through Donoghue's masterful prose, readers intimately dwell within Lib Wright’s internal conflicts, her shifting skepticism and growing empathy for Anna, and the subtlety of village dynamics—something only the written word can deliver fully.
Reading the novel unlocks thematic depths and nuances, as Donoghue envelops you in questions of faith, science, and the brutal realities of post-Famine Ireland. Each chapter unfolds gradually, providing room for contemplation and building a tension made personal by the proximity to the protagonist’s inner life. The complexity of belief systems and human relationships comes alive in a manner often abridged or condensed on screen.
Choosing the book over the film allows you to appreciate Donoghue’s language, her careful historical research, and her ability to unsettle and move through subtlety, rather than the visual and narrative shortcuts film necessitates. The Wonder is an opportunity to experience the full breadth of its ambiguities, moral dilemmas, and emotional heft in a way only a deeply engaging novel can offer.
Adaptation differences
One major difference between The Wonder film adaptation and Emma Donoghue’s novel is the narrative framing. The movie notably introduces a metafictional device, starting with shots of a film set and a narrator hinting that what follows is a story. This framing device is not present in the novel, which is told in a traditional third-person narrative focused closely on Lib’s perspective, making the reading experience more immersive and psychologically driven.
Character development presents another key divergence. The novel gives a deeper, richer exploration of Lib Wright’s background and psychological struggles, including her grief and motivations. In contrast, the film’s runtime naturally limits this detail, often implying Lib’s internal battles through visual cues rather than the in-depth introspection and backstory provided in the book.
Moreover, the relationship between Lib and Anna is portrayed with more subtlety and complexity in the novel. Donoghue spends considerable time building their delicate intimacy, distrust, and interdependence through extended conversations and inner monologues, whereas the film often condenses these interactions into simpler, more overt exchanges for the sake of pacing.
Finally, the treatment of Irish society, religion, and the townspeople’s dynamics reveals greater nuance in the book. Donoghue delves into the collective trauma of the Famine and its lingering impact on faith and family, while the movie prioritizes atmosphere over detailed social commentary. Thus, while the film captures the spirit of the story, it inevitably simplifies certain elements, making the novel the definitive source for a deeper, more complex experience.
The Wonder inspired from
The Wonder
by Emma Donoghue