
Expats
2024 • Drama • TV-MA
Set against the complex tapestry of Hong Kong residents, a multifaceted group of women sets off a chain of life-altering events that leaves everyone navigating the intricate balance between blame and accountability.
Why you should read the novel
Delving into Janice Y. K. Lee’s novel, The Expatriates, offers a uniquely immersive experience, inviting readers into the rich, inner lives of three expatriate women navigating love, loss, and identity in Hong Kong. The storytelling is intimate and layered, unraveling secrets, regrets, and complex relationships in a way that only a novel’s prose can fully capture. The book’s gorgeous descriptions, cultural nuances, and sensitive characterizations foster a deep empathy and understanding that far surpasses what can be covered within a television adaptation’s constraint.
By reading the source novel, you gain intimate insight into each character’s psyche through their thoughts, motivations, and histories, explored with nuanced detail that television often condenses or omits. Lee’s evocative writing brings Hong Kong to life, with its vibrant atmosphere and intricate social hierarchies, making it not just a backdrop but a vital character in itself. The book offers moments of quiet reflection, allowing readers to pause and ponder the significance of each interaction, something the pacing of TV rarely affords.
The Expatriates also allows readers to interpret ambiguities and draw personal meaning from its unresolved questions—an experience unique to the act of reading. The journey unravels at your own pace, cultivating a personal connection with the narrative that is difficult to replicate on screen. Opt for the novel, and you’ll discover layers of emotion, culture, and storytelling depth unavailable in even the most faithful onscreen adaptation.
Adaptation differences
One of the main differences between the TV adaptation Expats and Janice Y. K. Lee's source novel, The Expatriates, lies in narrative structure and perspective. While the novel meticulously alternates between the interior voices of the three main women—Margaret, Mercy, and Hilary—allowing readers to fully inhabit their inner conflicts, the series often streamlines and externalizes their stories. This can lead to a heavier reliance on visual cues, dialogue, and action, occasionally sacrificing the nuanced emotional layers Lee provides in her prose.
Another significant change is the way the adaptation modernizes the timeline and setting. While Lee’s book was published in 2016 and reflects a particular slice of expatriate life in that specific period, the series updates and, in some cases, recontextualizes sociopolitical elements to resonate with contemporary audiences. This includes a deeper engagement with Hong Kong’s evolving political climate and the presence of new supporting characters who may not appear in the original novel, thus shifting certain thematic emphases.
Casting choices and performances in the series can also alter viewer perceptions of characters originally depicted more ambiguously in the book. For example, television requires clear visual shorthand, potentially flattening or amplifying aspects of a character such as Margaret’s maternal grief or Mercy’s guilt, rather than leaving these elements as open-ended or subtly drawn as the novel does. The show’s pacing and episode structure might additionally omit or combine plotlines to keep the momentum tight, denying viewers the slower, more contemplative chapters that allow the novel’s characters to breathe and evolve organically.
Finally, the TV series may offer a more resolved or dramatic conclusion than Lee’s book, which is known for its restraint and openness. The novel’s ending leaves room for ambiguity and personal interpretation, in contrast to the medium's tendency toward closure and spectacle. The adaptation’s choices reflect the demands of episodic storytelling and audience expectations, inevitably resulting in a viewing experience that’s distinct from the deeply personal journey readers undertake with The Expatriates.
Expats inspired from
The Expatriates
by Janice Y. K. Lee