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Jeff O'Neal
July 2, 2025
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Welcome to Today in Books, our daily round-up of literary headlines at the intersection of politics, culture, media, and more. A whole bunch of book adaptation news flew across my desk over the last few days. Let’s take stock of a few of the more interesting projects and see where they are, why they might be exciting and/or what to wonder about them. What It Is: Nolan’s star-studded, bank-busting, epic-looking adaptation of The Odyssey coming next year. Where Are We With It: Apparently there was a trailer shown in-person somewhere that got on TikTok, and then immediately came down. Then came this poster, which is obviously cool.
How Confident Are We That This is Going to Be Good: Probably as confident as you can be about something like this. It will certainly look and sound amazing. Damon is a sturdy foundation for any kind of a movie. The rest of the cast is as close to a Hollywood pantheon as you will find. Real people Greek gods almost never works for me, so that is a concern but you could not lash me to a mast to keep me away from seeing this on the largest screen possible.
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What It Is: The second crack at adapting Stephen King’s 1982 novel of the same name. Where We Are With It:
It’s go time. This first, full, frenetic trailer is getting quite a bit of buzz. And with a prime November release date, this has the juice. How Confident Are We That This Is Going to Be Good: Look, we know this concept works: someone trying to escape being killed/captured. The Hunger Games. Squid Game. The Fugitive
. Director Edgar Wright is a winningly inventive filmmaker who has shown that he can combine action, comedy, and not a little pathos. Powell is white hot right now. And Coleman Domingo and Josh Brolin cannot find enough screen to eat in this thing. I have zero relationship with either the source material (which weirdly was set in 2025) or the first film, but I am ready for this one. What It Is:
Aniston has signed on to play Jeanette McCurdy’s mom in an Apple TV+ series based on McCurdy’s runaway best-selling memoir, I’m Glad My Mom Died. It’s a showbiz mother-daughter story of co-dependence, emotional abuse, making it, and Nickelodeon.
Where We Are With It: It was inevitable we were going to get an adaptation here, and I can only imagine that a lot of people were lining up for the plum role of the mom. Aniston and Apple have had a good (or at least long-running) thing going with The Morning News. So there is star-power and cash to get this thing up and going. How Confident Are We That It is Going to Be Good:
McCurdy is going to co-write and executive produce the show with Ari Katcher, whose previous projects I am not familiar with. Neither have AAA credits for TV, so that is a wildcard. This show is going to hinge on Aniston: she needs to be terrible, nuts, sympathetic, magnetic: a tragi-comic character that somehow gives a new take on the stage mom trope. McCurdy’s voice is what made the memoir exceptional, so finding a way to make that into the show is going to be key. This will be the most challenging role of Aniston’s career. High risk, high reward.
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What It Is: Speaking of high-risk, high-reward, Amazon has been developing a
Fourth Wing series. They have already burned through one writer/producer. Where We Are With It: Still looking for a showrunner. The idea that Schaeffer might be the one to bring this thing to your TV is pretty encouraging. WandaVision
was terrific. Strange, inventive, with big set pieces and a pretty wild conceit. These are adjectives that will be useful for anyone taking on the Empyrean Series. How Confident Are We That It Is Going To Be Good:
All we really have at this point are Yarros’ books and Amazon’s cash. Having read the first book and seen big expensive Amazon projects that did not work at all, I don’t think we can have a lot of confidence. The attention will be huge. I am of the mind that a really good showrunner can elevate the source material (though I still have no idea what they are going to do about the sex scenes). I think we are still years away from having any idea what this will be like.
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Deal of the Day Very, very good line-up of downpriced ebooks ahead of the holiday weekend. I’ll single out Creation Lake by Rachel Kushner
, which I, and a bunch of other folks (Amazon, The New York Times, etc) thought was one of the best books of 2024. Kushner has been a National Book Award finalist twice and this book was shortlisted for the Booker Prize. An intriguing, complicated story about belief, being adrift, and a little spycraft. On sale for $2.99 (check your preferred ebook retailer too). |
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