Top Dog

Top Dog

2020 • Crime, DramaNR
A mysterious disappearance makes two completely separate worlds collide, creating an extremely odd couple - the lawyer Emily and recently released convict Teddy.

Why you should read the novel

Jens Lapidus' Top Dog novels offer an immersive dive into Sweden’s criminal underworld and legal system, delivering an authenticity and rawness only possible through the page. Reading these books gives you unparalleled access to the internal thoughts and motivations of the main characters, building a richer understanding of their personal struggles and relationships. By experiencing the novels first, you benefit from Lapidus’ detailed, gritty prose, nuanced storytelling, and deep moral questions that TV simply cannot fully explore. Let the books guide you through Stockholm’s shadows before you see its adaptation.

Adaptation differences

The Top Dog TV series takes creative liberties with the source material, reimagining characters and events for dramatic effect. In the adaptation, Emily Jansson’s role as a lawyer is heavily emphasized and expanded, sometimes diverging from her arc in the novels. Teddy Maksumic's backstory and motivations also undergo changes; the show humanizes him further and introduces new plotlines not found in the books to build suspense and emotional depth. Significant plot points are restructured or omitted, altering key relationships and reducing the complexity of the criminal organizations as depicted in Jens Lapidus' original work. Another major difference lies in the structure and pacing. The TV series condenses and intertwines storylines, combining multiple threads from the books to fit the episodic format, which sometimes sacrifices the depth and slow-burn tension that Lapidus crafts in his novels. Some supporting characters are either omitted or merged, changing the interpersonal dynamics that are essential in the books. This streamlining affects the sense of realism, while the novels allow readers to linger in the complex web woven between lawyers, criminals, and law enforcement. Additionally, the tone of the TV adaptation, while faithful to the noir spirit, tends to dramatize certain elements for a broader audience, sometimes at the expense of the subtlety and ambiguity that define Lapidus’ writing. The novels present morally gray scenarios and intricate legal subplots that are often simplified or resolved differently on screen. This makes the books a richer, more challenging read for those who appreciate complexity in their crime fiction. Overall, while the series brings the suspense and atmosphere of Top Dog to life, much of the source material’s psychological depth and social commentary is trimmed or altered for television. By exploring the novels, readers can savor the full breadth of Lapidus' storytelling and experience Stockholm’s hidden worlds in a way that the TV series can only hint at.

Top Dog inspired from

The Top Dog Series (VIP Room, Stockholm Delete, Top Dog)
by Jens Lapidus

TVSeries by the same author(s) for
Top Dog