
Come Back, Lucy
1978 • Kids, Mystery
Young Lucy is bereaved and sent to live with her cousins. She makes a friend in Alice. But Alice has been dead for over a hundred years and wishes to drag Lucy back in time, to play with her for eternity.
Why you should read the novel
If the 1978 TV series Come Back, Lucy intrigued you, go to the source: Pamela Sykes’ chilling novel Mirror of Danger (also published as Come Back, Lucy). Experience the original vision behind the haunting, where every whisper, reflection, and shadow was first imagined on the page.
The book delivers deeper psychology, richer atmosphere, and a slow-burn tension only prose can sustain. Sykes’ elegant, unsettling storytelling places you inside Lucy’s fears and desires, making the ghostly encounters feel intimate, ambiguous, and unforgettable—perfect for fans of classic British ghost stories.
Choose the novel for its layered character work, period texture, and literary craft. Whether you call it Mirror of Danger or Come Back, Lucy, Pamela Sykes’ book offers the definitive version of this timeless, spine-tingling tale.
Adaptation differences
The TV adaptation necessarily externalizes what the book keeps internal. Pamela Sykes’ novel leans on Lucy’s inner voice and shifting perceptions; the series translates that into visuals, music cues, and dialogue, changing the feel from psychological intimacy to screen-ready suspense.
Pacing differs notably. The novel’s eerie build unfolds with measured, claustrophobic momentum, while the episodic structure of the series emphasizes set pieces and cliffhangers. This restructures events so tensions crest at episode breaks, altering how revelations and hauntings arrive.
Character focus shifts as well. The book centers intensely on Lucy’s isolation and the seductive pull of the past, whereas the series gives more time to supporting relatives and everyday interactions, softening some edges and making relationships clearer but less ambiguous than on the page.
Tone and resolution are adjusted for television. Where the novel leaves room for lingering unease and interpretive ambiguity, the series tends toward clearer explanations and a more reassuring endpoint, trading literary uncertainty for a neatly concluded, family-audience-friendly finish.
Come Back, Lucy inspired from
Mirror of Danger (also published as Come Back, Lucy)
by Pamela Sykes