
The Time in Between
2013 • Action & Adventure, Drama • TV-14
Sira Quiroga is a young Spanish dressmaker engaged to a solid suitor when a suave typewriter salesman upends her life. Spain is being upended by a civil war and the new regime's growing alliances with Nazi Germany. Sira, smart, gutsy and resourceful with a Scarlett O'Hara-like ability to whip up designer duds on a moment's notice, Sira has spunk. Sira gains and loses a small fortune, is dumped by her cad of a lover in Morocco, runs guns to get the cash to start her life anew and becomes couturier to the Nazi wives stationed in Madrid. Urged on by her friend, the real-life British spy Rosalinda Fox, Sira, too, aids the British cause.
Why you should read the novel
Reading María Dueñas’s 'The Time In Between' immerses you far more deeply into Sira Quiroga’s psychological journey than the TV series ever could. The nuanced prose brings her struggles, hopes, and evolving sense of independence to life in captivating detail, drawing you inside her world with the intimacy only a novel can provide.
The book also excels in its rich historical context, fleshing out the tumultuous political background of pre-war Spain and Morocco. Dueñas paints an evocative portrait of fashion, espionage, and shifting alliances, inviting you to linger over subtle details and historical insights often condensed or lost on screen.
Finally, the original novel rewards readers with beautifully crafted language and character development, offering layers of motivation and internal conflict that the TV adaptation must abbreviate. With its exquisite pacing and emotional resonance, María Dueñas’s story is best experienced on the page, where every decision and twist unfolds with maximum depth and suspense.
Adaptation differences
One of the most noticeable differences between 'The Time in Between' TV series and the novel is the way Sira’s inner thoughts, motivations, and psychological evolution are portrayed. The book allows readers direct access to her internal world, providing a nuanced and sometimes ambiguous account of her feelings, which adds layers to her development. In contrast, the series often relies on visual cues and dialogue, sometimes flattening the complexity of her character.
Another key difference is the depth of historical and political context. Dueñas’s novel devotes significant attention to the era’s wider social upheavals, including detailed explanations of the Spanish Civil War, Morocco’s colonial tensions, and the machinations of espionage. The TV series, by necessity, streamlines these aspects, focusing more on plot progression and visual storytelling than on intricate background detail.
Pacing and sequencing also vary notably. The novel takes its time with Sira’s formative experiences and relationships, lingering over her apprenticeship in Madrid and her gradual acclimation to Tangier and Tetouan. The series, to maintain dramatic momentum, condenses or omits various connections and plot threads, resulting in a faster but sometimes less satisfying narrative arc.
Characterization is also affected. Several secondary characters—friends, mentors, and adversaries—receive richer backgrounds and more ambiguous motives in the book. The adaptation occasionally simplifies these roles or alters their storylines to fit its episodic format, which can dilute the subtlety and complexity that make the novel particularly memorable.
The Time in Between inspired from
The Time In Between
by María Dueñas