Tuesday, 7 April 2026

The book was better and I’ve become that person!

I’ve always been jealous of those people who read the book first and then go on to watch the TV or movie based in it. They always seemed so smug, like they know something the rest of us don't. They get to say things like "That didn’t happen in the book," or "They completely changed that character," and I had to believe what they were saying because I was never one for books. The only time I read the book before seeing the movie was the last 2 Harry Potter books and even then I already knew what the characters were like from watching the first few movies.

Audiobook

Now that audiobooks are in my life, it has changed everything. I am listening to them every chance that I get and so far, have listened to some great ones. In fact, I feel really lucky that every book I have chosen, I've enjoyed. One day I started listening to The Flat Share by Beth O’Leary. I didn’t know anything about it, I hadn’t heard the hype, I didn’t even know it existed before I pressed play and started listening.

The story is about Tiffy Moore and Leon Twomey, two complete strangers with opposite schedules who agree to share a one-bedroom London flat and the same bed without ever actually meeting. Tiffy uses the flat at night after a breakup leaves her desperate for somewhere affordable, while Leon, a palliative care nurse working nights, sleeps there during the day. They communicate entirely through Post-it notes, slowly building a connection while dealing with their own messy lives, emotional baggage, and in Tiffy’s case, an ex-boyfriend who is way more than just a bit annoying.

When I was writing a blog post, I Googled the name of the book to make sure I had the author correct and that’s when I discovered it had been made into a TV show. For Channel 5 of all places. I hadn’t seen a trailer or anyone mention it, it had completely passed me by. Suddenly I was excited because this was my moment. I had finally done it the right way round, the book before the TV show. Watching the TV version after listening to the book was such a strange experience, in a good way. I wasn’t annoyed or rolling my eyes every five minutes, I was more curious! The TV show gets the heart of the story but it did feel different.

Tiffy, for example, in the book you hear all the little doubts she brushes off, the way she laughs things away, the way she slowly realises that her past relationship wasn’t just a bit rubbish, it actually did some damage. On screen, she’s still warm and likeable but she feels more confident early on. Leon is where I really noticed the change. In the audiobook his voice is such a big part of who he is. Those short sentences, the pauses, the way he thinks. On TV, he’s still kind and gentle but without hearing his thoughts, he becomes a bit more average when, in the audiobook Leon has something extra. The relationship itself also feels different. In the book, everything takes its time with the notes, missed chances and waiting around but in the show things move along a bit quicker, which I get. TV has a pace to keep but I did miss that slow build.

By the end of the series, I found myself doing the thing I’d always watched other people do. Comparing, not in a nasty way but just noticing. Understanding why some things were changed, why others were left out but thinking the book did it better. That’s when it hit me. I’ve become one of those people!

The book is deeper, the audiobook especially. The TV show is comforting and easy to watch and does a decent job of staying true to the story but if you want the full experience, the one that makes you feel a bit wobbly in places, the book wins! If you’d told me a year ago that I’d be sitting there judging a Channel 5 adaptation based on an audiobook I found by accident, I’d have laughed. Yet here we are. Turns out, I just needed to listen instead of read and now I finally get why people love being able to say the book was better!

What book do you think is better than the TV show or movie?

11 comments :

  1. I don't think I've ever thought a movie was better than a book! But then I'm not a huge fan of screens in general (unless it's my Kindle screen!). I'm always going to be way more biased towards the book! Words can convey meaning and depth more than Hollywood can, though admittedly there are some really good actors and actresses. I'm glad you're "one of those people now," regarding books/movies- welcome to the club :).

    ReplyDelete
  2. Enjoyed reading this. I thought "The Girl On The Train" was a much better book than movie. Did you read/see that one? I could not put that book down and thought the movie was just meh.

    ReplyDelete
  3. If I read a book and like or love it, I usually enjoy the movie but it is a totally different experience. In a book your mind takes the words and creates a whole world that you are experiencing. Movies are not able to engage my imagination to create a world for me. I love movies but it's just different. When I was growing up, I read all of the Mary Poppins books. When I was in high school they made the movie. I went back to my elementary school to visit the librarian. We agreed that we loved the movie, but it wasn't the Mary Poppins from the books.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Ha! I am definitely one of those people.. there have been very, very rare exceptions where I think the movie was pretty great but mostly I think the book is always better. I get that actors can only emote so many of those internal thoughts into facial expressions/acting and I miss that inside look at what the characters are thinking that really seems to get the heart of who they are.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I think that books are always better because they can describe things in ways that can't be done on screen. And now I'm interested in this book!

    ReplyDelete
  6. Gone With The Wind, for sure!! Scarlette is much more devious and manipulative in the book, and had two other husbands before Rhett and a few other kids before Bonnie. The movie is amazing, but the book is better!! Welcome to the club, Kim!! LOL

    ReplyDelete
  7. Great post. If I read the book first, I have already made up my mind about how the characters look and sound. I rather watch the movie or tv show first before reading the book. I listen to audiobooks only if I like the reading and after I have read the book. Different experiences.

    -Soma

    ReplyDelete
  8. Ohhh... this is good. Yeah, I didn't think I would be that person either but I have at times found that I like a book better. One example the unabridged book of Wuthering Heights! Hands down!

    ReplyDelete
  9. I think you get so much more detail in the book that it often turns out to be better. Sometimes I've found exceptions. Although I did watch the film first and didn't know it was the book I was about to read. The Film was A Man Called Otto and the book A Man Called Ove. Now, the film was far more nuanced and humorous. And it made me cry. The book was more straightforward and just told the story. Both good, but film won for me, plus it had Tom Hanks in it and I've always been a fan. He's getting on a bit now, but I've watched his movies from when he was a young man.
    I've Always been one of those people, lol.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Gosh, you are making me want to try an audio book! I still haven't ever listened to one! I'm so worried I'd zone out and miss all of it because my brain doesn't stop running!

    ReplyDelete
  11. Love this. I’ll have to check out the TV version as I’ve read the book.

    ReplyDelete