
Kindred
2022 • Drama • TV-MA
A young aspiring writer discovers secrets about her family's past when she finds herself mysteriously being pulled back and forth in time to a 19th century plantation.
Why you should read the novel
Reading Octavia E. Butler’s novel Kindred offers a profound, nuanced exploration of American history, identity, and the harrowing reality of slavery through a deeply personal lens. Butler’s evocative prose and richly developed characters create a vivid sense of time and place, drawing readers into Dana's emotional journey with a complexity that transcends adaptation. The immersive narrative delves into the moral ambiguities of survival and resistance, challenging readers to confront uncomfortable truths about history and contemporary society.
Butler masterfully interweaves speculative fiction with historical realism, resulting in a story that is both accessible and thought-provoking. The novel’s distinctive first-person perspective gives intimate access to Dana’s thoughts, fears, and ethical dilemmas, deepening readers' connection to her struggle and allowing for a more profound reflection on the lived experience of Black women. This tight narrative focus, paired with Butler's precise storytelling, solidifies Kindred’s standing as an essential work of American literature.
Reading the novel opens up opportunities for richer engagement with the book’s themes, symbolism, and social commentary at your own pace. Unlike a limited series, which may condense, simplify, or dramatize plot points, the novel allows for quiet reflection and personal interpretation. Butler’s skillful layering of time, memory, and trauma offers a deeply rewarding reading experience that can’t be replicated on screen.
Adaptation differences
The Kindred TV series introduces significant updates to the setting and time period, placing the present-day segments in 2016 instead of 1976, as in the novel. This change shifts the nuances of Dana’s interactions, her relationship dynamics, and the context of her time travel, focusing more on contemporary issues and sensibilities. The series also modernizes Dana’s background, including her aspirations and her immediate world, to appeal to a 21st-century audience.
Characterization undergoes adjustments in the adaptation. The show expands and alters supporting characters — including both Dana’s family and the people she encounters in the past — sometimes adding new characters or expanding the roles of existing ones for dramatic effect or serialized storytelling. Notably, Dana’s relationship with her mother is given more prominence and complexity, diverging from the source material.
Structurally, the TV series differs by interweaving more frequent time jumps and cliffhangers designed to enhance suspense and keep episodic momentum. The adaptation sometimes deviates from the book’s tightly controlled narrative arc, exploring subplots and emotional beats that are absent from Butler’s novel, thereby altering the story’s pacing and focus. Some scenes from the original novel are either expanded or significantly altered to fit within episodic storytelling conventions.
Finally, the book’s introspective first-person narration is replaced in the series with more externalized drama and visual storytelling. The interiority of Dana’s thoughts and moral reckoning, so essential in the novel, is at times replaced by visual cues or dialogue, which can dilute the depth and complexity of her internal conflicts. As a result, while the TV series pays homage to Butler’s themes, the adaptation often reframes, simplifies, or dramatizes the core narrative and character dynamics to fit the medium.
Kindred inspired from
Kindred
by Octavia E. Butler