What contemporary literary fiction will be considered classic in 50 years?
On the question of whether to read the book or watch the adaptation when you only have time for one: my answer is almost always read the book, with one significant exception. If the adaptation is by a director whose work you know and whose sensibility is clearly in dialogue with the source, the adaptation is the better starting point because it gives you a reading — a prior interpretation — that you can then compare to the book.
Villeneuve's Dune is an example. Having seen the films first, I read the novel with his visual interpretation as a frame. The scenes that work differently in the novel — more interior, more dependent on the relationship between Paul's consciousness and the reader's — were clarified by the contrast.
The book first rule is a good default but it's not absolute.
No comments yet
Be the first to share your thoughts.