
Instinct
2018 • Crime, Drama • TV-14
Dr. Dylan Reinhart, a gifted author, university professor and former CIA operative is lured back to his old life by tenacious top NYPD Detective Lizzie Needham. Though Dylan and Lizzie initially clash, when it comes to catching killers, they make an ideal team.
Why you should read the novel
If you love gripping crime stories with intricate plots and intelligent protagonists, Murder Games delivers an experience you'll remember. The novel’s narrative digs deep into the psyche of both the criminal and the investigator, offering a level of psychological insight and suspense the TV adaptation only hints at. Patterson and Roughan’s prose is sharp and immersive, allowing you to imagine every scene and twist, engaging your mind far more actively than passive viewing.
Reading the source novel gives you access to the full complexity of Dr. Dylan Reinhart’s character, his relationships, and his internal struggles. The novel doesn’t just tell a crime story; it explores morality, personal demons, and the art of deduction with far more nuance than network constraints allow. Savoring the written word also lets the reader appreciate the layers and subtext behind the casework.
By choosing the book over the screen, you gain a richer understanding of motivations, themes, and emotional stakes. The satisfaction of unraveling clues alongside the protagonist is amplified when you read the story at your own pace. For anyone truly interested in the heart of the narrative, Murder Games offers rewards that go beyond the polished surface of Instinct’s TV adaptation.
Adaptation differences
One of the primary differences between Instinct and its source novel, Murder Games, is the characterization of Dr. Dylan Reinhart. In the book, Reinhart is a married man leading a mostly private life, whereas the series revises his personal background, making him an openly gay former CIA operative. The TV show expands his backstory to heighten representation and build new dynamics, which alters his motivations and relationships compared to the novel.
Another key distinction is the approach to the investigations. While the book focuses on a single case—pursuing a serial killer who crafts his crimes like games—the series adopts a procedural format, presenting a new crime each week. This episodic structure diversifies the cases and shifts attention away from a single, detailed storyline, affecting the original intensity and continuity found in Murder Games.
Supporting characters also undergo significant changes in adaptation. TV’s Detective Elizabeth Needham is a new creation, not present in the novel, and the partnership between her and Reinhart is central to the show’s appeal. Many plot points, subplots, and relationships are thus invented or adjusted for the screen, resulting in a different narrative rhythm and emotional focus.
Furthermore, the medium itself impacts pacing and depth. The TV series condenses psychological insights and complex motivations to fit time constraints and broadcast standards. The book, in contrast, uses the slower pace of literature to flesh out its themes, allowing for a deeper dive into the nuances of morality, psychology, and the nature of crime. Readers seeking sophistication in plot and character development will find the book’s treatment distinctly more profound.
Instinct inspired from
Murder Games
by James Patterson, Howard Roughan