Doktrinen

Doktrinen

2024 • Crime, Drama
Journalist Nina Wedén gets the political scoop century and finds herself fast-tracked to becoming the Press Secretary for Sweden's newly appointed Foreign Minister, Jacob Weiss.

Why you should read the novel

While the 'Doktrinen' TV series brings Sweden’s political undercurrents to life, the source novels go far deeper into the psychological and ideological motivations of the characters. Reading the books allows you to truly immerse yourself in multiple viewpoints, intricate backstories, and the internal struggles that often get abbreviated or omitted from the on-screen adaptation. With the trilogy, readers can experience the authors’ richly detailed settings and unique narrative voices, offering a more nuanced and complex tapestry than what can fit within a limited TV runtime. The novels provide the freedom to explore Sweden’s shifting social climate at your own pace, capturing subtle philosophical debates that shape the story’s view of truth, power, and society. Choosing the books over the series rewards you with a deeper intellectual engagement, as they explore history, ideology, and identity through seamless prose, unfiltered by the requirements of visual storytelling. The immersive descriptions and philosophical undertones in the novels make them a profoundly rewarding experience for readers who crave substance as well as suspense.

Adaptation differences

One major difference between the TV adaptation and the books is the condensation of character arcs. Where the novels take their time unpacking personal histories and complex motivations, the series often reduces these layers for the sake of pacing, inevitably simplifying some of the characters’ internal conflicts. Secondly, the TV series streamlines certain storylines and even omits key subplots found in the books, particularly those delving into philosophical and societal debates. This means viewers miss out on the detailed exploration of Sweden’s ideological landscape that forms the thematic backbone of the novels. Visual storytelling necessitates changes in tone and presentation, and 'Doktrinen' on TV adopts a more action-oriented, suspenseful approach. The books, meanwhile, often dwell in introspection, using internal monologues and shifting perspectives to create a deeply cerebral atmosphere. Lastly, the adaptation sometimes alters specific character relationships and outcomes to fit television conventions. Some fates are left more ambiguous in the novels, whereas the series chooses more definitive endings or resolutions to popular storylines, potentially changing the message or emotional impact intended by the original authors.

Doktrinen inspired from

The Doctrine Trilogy
by Mats Söderlund, Åsa Larsson, Ingela Korsell