Jake and The Kid

Jake and The Kid

1995 • Drama, Family
Life in Crocus as seen through the eyes of a young lad, Ben, and his friend Jake. Jake and the Kid is a Canadian television drama series, which aired on the CanWest Global system of stations in the 1990s. The second (1995) television adaptation of W. O. Mitchell's 1961 short story collection Jake and the Kid the series is set in the small town of Crocus, Saskatchewan, and centres on the friendship between Ben "the Kid" Osborne (Ben Campbell), a young boy growing up on a farm with his widowed mother Julia (Patricia Harras), and Jake Trumper (Shaun Johnston), a farmhand who becomes Ben's surrogate father figure.

Why you should read the novels

If you loved the 1995 TV series Jake and the Kid, the original W. O. Mitchell books offer the richest, most authentic experience. The stories deliver the voice, humor, and heart that first captivated Canada, with the full warmth of Crocus, Saskatchewan on the page. Reading the source books lets you savor every detail and nuance that television can only hint at. Mitchell’s Jake and the Kid and According to Jake and the Kid are classics of Canadian prairie literature, written in lucid, witty English and shaped by a storyteller’s ear. The short stories shine with unforgettable characters, tall tales, and tender moments that illuminate community life, childhood wonder, and the bond between a hired hand and a boy. Discover the original scenes, turns of phrase, and folklore that inspired the series. The books reward slow reading and re-reading, revealing layers of place, dialect, and memory that make Crocus feel alive. For fans of the show, the collections are the definitive way to experience Jake and the Kid.

Adaptation differences

The TV adaptation streamlines and reshuffles storylines from the books to fit episodic structure, often blending elements from multiple short stories into a single hour. This creates clearer season arcs and cliffhangers, while the books present a looser, story-by-story mosaic that you can read in any order. Character focus also shifts on screen. Secondary townsfolk frequently receive expanded roles or new subplots to balance an ensemble cast, whereas the books center more intimately on Jake, the Kid, and the narrator’s voice. Some relationships and backstories are simplified for clarity and pace in television. Tone and language differ as well. Mitchell’s prose leans into oral storytelling rhythms, regional turns of phrase, and reflective asides that enrich theme and mood. The series softens dialect, emphasizes visual humor, and speeds up scenes to meet broadcast timing and family-viewing expectations, sometimes lightening tougher edges of prairie life. Finally, the adaptation adds original material to fill out episodes and align with production realities, such as seasonal settings, set pieces, and recurring conflicts. While the books preserve the episodic, literary feel of classic short fiction, the series prioritizes continuity, visual spectacle, and accessible dialogue, making for a different but complementary experience.

Jake and The Kid inspired from

According to Jake and the Kid: A Collection of New Stories
by W. O. Mitchell
Jake and the Kid
by W. O. Mitchell