Death by Lightning

Death by Lightning

2025 • Crime, Drama
The epic and stranger-than-fiction true story of James Garfield, reluctant 20th president of the United States, and his greatest admirer Charles Guiteau — the man who would come to kill him.

Why you should read the novels

If Death by Lightning (2025) on Netflix has you curious about the real history, go straight to the sources. Candice Millard’s Destiny of the Republic and Kenneth D. Ackerman’s Dark Horse deliver the full story behind President James A. Garfield’s astonishing rise, the patronage wars, and the shocking assassination that reshaped the Gilded Age. Millard’s Destiny of the Republic reads like a propulsive medical and political mystery, revealing how misguided 19th‑century medicine and a volatile assassin, Charles Guiteau, doomed a promising presidency. Ackerman’s Dark Horse complements it with a sweeping, insider account of the raucous 1880 Republican convention, Garfield’s improbable nomination, and the power brokers who thought they controlled Washington. Before you watch Death by Lightning, experience the nuance, context, and primary‑source depth only great history books provide. These definitive works illuminate Garfield’s character, the era’s corruption, Alexander Graham Bell’s desperate invention, and the complicated men who steered America through crisis—insights no limited series can fully match.

Adaptation differences

Based on early announcements and trade coverage, Death by Lightning (2025) is positioned as a tightly paced political thriller, while the books offer broader, deeply sourced history. Expect the series to foreground high‑stakes confrontations and plot momentum; Destiny of the Republic and Dark Horse dwell more on context: medical practices, scientific experiments, and the intricate party machinery that produced a “dark horse” nominee. Tone and focus will likely differ. Millard devotes major space to medicine—Dr. D. Willard Bliss’s treatments and Alexander Graham Bell’s search for the bullet—whereas a screen adaptation often compresses technical detail to highlight character conflict, conspiracy anxieties, and the psychological duel between James A. Garfield and Charles Guiteau. Ackerman’s convention chronicle—delegate counts, floor tactics, and factional maneuver—may be streamlined into a few decisive set pieces. Characters may be composited or expanded. Books can track a wide cast—Roscoe Conkling, Chester A. Arthur, Robert Todd Lincoln, party bosses, doctors, inventors—across months. For clarity, a limited series commonly merges minor figures, telescopes timelines, and amplifies antagonists like Conkling to sharpen the Stalwart versus Half‑Breed struggle that Dark Horse and Destiny of the Republic document with granular nuance. Structure is another likely difference. The books braid parallel threads—politics, science, medicine, and Guiteau’s delusions—over an extended arc. Television tends to re-order events for suspense, place turning points near episode breaks, and condense Garfield’s recovery period. Readers seeking the full chronology, the medical postmortem, and the exhaustive sourcing behind each revelation will find them most completely in Destiny of the Republic and Dark Horse.

Death by Lightning inspired from

Destiny of the Republic: A Tale of Madness, Medicine and the Murder of a President
by Candice Millard
Dark Horse: The Surprise Election and Political Murder of President James A. Garfield
by Kenneth D. Ackerman