The Reunion

The Reunion

2022 • Drama, Mystery
The story opens in the present day, at a high school reunion in the south of France where three former friends reconnect. They grew apart and lost touch, but they are still bound by a tragic secret tied to the disappearance of a high school girl who went missing 25 years ago in the region.

Why you should read the novel

Guillaume Musso’s novel The Reunion draws you in with its mesmerizing prose and beautifully constructed tension. The intricate plot and shifting timelines create a deeply immersive reading experience that allows you to uncover secrets right alongside the characters. The book’s evocative descriptions and well-developed inner monologues provide a richer, more personal journey than what can be depicted on screen. Reading the novel offers insights into the motivations and psychological struggles of each character, exploring their pasts with intimacy and nuance. The emotional weight of teenage friendships, lost loves, and unresolved trauma is portrayed in a way that invites reflection and empathy—a depth often lost in adaptation. By choosing the book, you take on the role of detective yourself, piecing together clues and suspicions through cleverly layered narrative threads. In Musso’s world, the suspense builds gradually, rewarding patient readers with a complex and satisfying resolution to a haunting mystery that lingers long after the final page.

Adaptation differences

The TV series The Reunion takes creative liberties with the plot structure and character development, shifting several key details from the novel. For instance, the show introduces original subplots and secondary characters to heighten drama and expand the ensemble, whereas the book maintains a tighter focus on a core group, allowing for deeper exploration of their psychological complexities. In terms of setting, the novel's French Riviera atmosphere is deeply ingrained in its narrative, coloring the mood and tone of the story. The adaptation keeps the scenic backdrop but condenses or alters certain locations for practical filming reasons, sometimes losing the layered sense of place that Musso crafts with descriptive detail in the novel. Another notable difference lies in the timeline. The book jumps skillfully between past and present, offering rich context and gradual revelations about the central disappearance and its impact on the now-adult characters. The series, on the other hand, streamlines these transitions, often relying on flashbacks and rapid exposition to keep the pace brisk for viewers, occasionally sacrificing depth for clarity. Most significantly, the resolution of the central mystery diverges in several aspects. Key twists are either reimagined or omitted in the television version, leading to a slightly altered climax and different emotional payoffs. As a result, viewers of the show may not experience the same intricate unraveling of secrets and character motivations that make the novel stand out as a gripping psychological thriller.

The Reunion inspired from

The Reunion
by Guillaume Musso