Pretty Little Liars: Original Sin

Pretty Little Liars: Original Sin

2022 • Drama, MysteryTV-MA
Twenty years ago, a series of tragic events almost ripped the blue-collar town of Millwood apart. Now, in the present day, a group of disparate teen girls finds themselves tormented by an unknown Assailant and made to pay for the secret sin their parents committed two decades ago, as well as their own.

Why you shoud read the novel

Delving into the Pretty Little Liars novels by Sara Shepard offers an immersive literary journey that outshines what screens can capture. The books allow you to experience the psychological intricacies and inner thoughts of the main characters, making their secrets, fears, and uncertainties feel intensely personal. With Shepard’s clever plotting and suspenseful style, the original novels provide a richer exploration of deception and friendship, drawing you deep into a world where nothing and no one is as they seem. Choosing to read the books lets you pace the mystery, savoring the tantalizing clues and red herrings that Shepard masterfully weaves throughout the series. Each novel expands the universe incrementally, giving readers the chance to connect the dots alongside the characters, heightening the thrill and engagement far more than a TV adaptation. The insights into character backstories and psychological motivations form layers that no episode runtime could fully encompass. If you value nuanced storytelling, unexpected twists, and detailed character development, the Pretty Little Liars books are a must-read. They present a different dimension to the iconic ‘A’ villain, the Liars’ friendships, and their troubled home lives, immersing readers in edge-of-your-seat drama only a book can convey.

Adaptation differences

Pretty Little Liars: Original Sin is noteworthy for its significant departures from Sara Shepard’s original books, starting with its cast of characters. While the novels focus on Spencer, Aria, Hanna, and Emily (with Alison as their missing friend), Original Sin centers on a new group—Imogen, Tabby, Noa, Faran, and Mouse—living in the fictional town of Millwood rather than Rosewood. This completely changes the relationship dynamics, family backgrounds, and personalities at the heart of the story. Another key difference is the tone and genre. The books maintain a tone close to teen mystery and domestic suspense, emphasizing secrets, lying, and social drama. In contrast, Original Sin pivots heavily into horror territory, with slasher elements, darker themes, and more graphic content. The series incorporates much heavier doses of violence and explores issues like generational trauma—topics not thoroughly addressed in the books. Furthermore, the central antagonist in the novels—‘A’—is characterized as a mysterious blackmailer with complex motives related to the Liars' past. In Original Sin, ‘A’ is a more physically present and terrifying figure, with a mystery rooted in past crimes and vengeance stretching back a generation. This shift alters the psychological dynamics and the nature of threats facing the protagonists, making the stakes feel both more immediate and more physically dangerous. Lastly, the thematic focus shifts in the adaptation. The novels delve into social hierarchies, the pressures of perfection, and personal secrets within a suburban environment, emphasizing the aftermath of Alison’s disappearance. Original Sin instead uses its new setting and characters to tackle broader social issues and the consequences of parental sins; it’s less about high school popularity and more about confronting past injustices. In these ways, the show stands as both a homage to and a reinvention of the original literary world.

Pretty Little Liars: Original Sin inspired from

Pretty Little Liars
by Sara Shepard

TVSeries by the same author(s) for
Pretty Little Liars: Original Sin