
Resurrection
2014 • Drama, Sci-Fi & Fantasy • TV-14
The people of Arcadia, Missouri are forever changed when their deceased loved ones suddenly start to reappear.
Why you should read the novel
Jason Mott’s novel, The Returned, takes readers on an intimate journey through the hearts and minds of those confronted with the impossible. The book’s lyricism and focus on nuanced emotion allow readers to fully inhabit each character’s struggle and hope, something that’s sometimes compressed on screen. If you’re captivated by meditations on grief, love, and what it means to truly let go, the novel delves more deeply into the emotional complexities than the TV series can show. Reading the source material lets you savor a more introspective narrative pace, free from the constraints of episodic drama.
Adaptation differences
One key difference between The Returned novel and the Resurrection TV series is the focus and scope of the story. The novel centers primarily on one small family—the Hargraves—dealing with the return of their young son, Jacob, decades after his death. In contrast, the series expands this central mystery to encompass numerous families in the town of Arcadia, creating a wider ensemble cast and intersecting plotlines designed for serial storytelling.
Another marked difference is tone and pacing. Jason Mott’s book is slower and more introspective, offering meditative passages on faith, mortality, and acceptance. The TV adaptation takes a more suspenseful, mystery-oriented approach, increasing dramatic tension and introducing thriller elements to hook viewers from episode to episode.
The adaptation also reinterprets several characters and their motivations. For instance, Lucille Hargrave’s inner turmoil and Henry’s skepticism are given extended space in the novel, allowing readers to experience the depth of their emotional struggles. In the show, much of this complexity is externalized, sometimes at the expense of subtlety, in service of advancing the plot.
Lastly, the novel’s conclusion is ambiguous and thought-provoking, inviting the reader to grapple with unresolved questions about the return of the dead and its meaning. The TV series, faced with network expectations, introduces larger conspiracies, cliffhangers, and a more finite resolution to appeal to weekly viewers, thus moving away from the novel’s open-ended reflection.
Resurrection inspired from
The Returned
by Jason Mott