
Let’s be honest: if you combine watching and reading, you have probably found yourself arguing (maybe even a lot) whether a show really represents the book. A new player in this field is Apple TV+, which has been quite successful in this competition by acquiring the rights to a wide range of works from sci-fi blockbusters to literary tearjerkers. Some have succeeded, some have failed, and some have provoked furious discussions in the group chats. I have made a list of the 10 best Apple TV+ book-to-TV adaptations, for which we all know that drama ranking is half of the fun.

10. The Mosquito Coast
Paul Theroux’s masterpiece novel gets a new contemporary reworking with Justin Theroux, yes, his nephew, taking on the lead role of Allie Fox, an idealistic genius inventor on the lam with his family. The series builds on the book’s anti-establishment themes, amplifying the tension and emotional mayhem. It deviates from the original in spots, but the combination of family drama and survivalist intrigue makes it must-watch TV.

9. Shining Girls
Lauren Beukes’ time-traveling thriller is reimagined as a moody, psychological thriller centered on Elisabeth Moss. She stars as Kirby, a woman hell-bent on catching the man who assaulted her years ago, a killer with the ability to move through time. The series condenses the book’s scope, focusing on the trauma and strength of Kirby. Moss injects her trademark intensity, making Shining Girls into a chilling, time-bending ride.

8. Five Days at Memorial
Sheri Fink’s nonfiction account of a New Orleans hospital during Hurricane Katrina becomes a harrowing limited series led by Vera Farmiga. As Dr. Anna Pou, Farmiga captures the impossible choices faced when the floodwaters rose, and the power failed. It’s not an easy watch, but it’s deeply human, unflinching in showing the moral and emotional wreckage left in Katrina’s wake.

7. Black Bird
Half crime thriller, half psychological standoff, Black Bird translates James Keene’s memoir into a tense, slow-burning work of art. Taron Egerton stars as Keene, an inmate, in return for his freedom if he can extract a confession from possible serial killer Larry Hall (Paul Walter Hauser). What transpires is a heart-pounding exercise in manipulation and trust. Egerton and Hauser deliver magnetic performances that keep the suspense razor-sharp throughout.

6. The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey
Samuel L. Jackson gives one of his finest performances in this adaptation of Walter Mosley’s novel. He is Ptolemy Grey, a 91-year-old with dementia who, briefly, recovers his memories, and with them, long-hidden secrets. The show is a combination of mystery with a deeply emotional investigation of memory, legacy, and connection. It’s poignant, heartbreaking, and wonderfully acted.

5. Truth Be Told
Based on Kathleen Barber’s Are You Sleeping, this series takes on the true-crime podcast phenomenon with Octavia Spencer as Poppy Parnell, a reporter reopening a cold case from decades past. Every season presents new enigmas as it navigates the morality of commodifying tragedy. Spencer’s authoritative performance anchors the show, making it as thoughtful as it is hooky.

4. Defending Jacob
William Landay’s legal thriller best-seller is given a pitch-perfect translation in this edge-of-your-seat miniseries. Chris Evans and Michelle Dockery star as parents whose teenager is charged with murder, and the show bottlenecks all the novel’s claustrophobic tension. With top-shelf performances and a gradual build-up of moral fear, Defending Jacob is a gut-punch of family drama and courtroom drama.

3. Silo
Drawing inspiration from Hugh Howey’s Wool series, Silo plunges audiences into a dystopian future where humanity exists in a giant underground complex, and defiance of the rules is taboo. Rebecca Ferguson is excellent as Juliette, a brilliant engineer digging up secrets. The show does more with Howey’s original storytelling with eye-popping visuals and careful world-building, building a future that feels disconcertingly real.

2. Foundation
Long considered “unfilmable,” Isaac Asimov’s iconic sci-fi epic finally gets on screen, and the outcome is big, smart, and visually stunning. Foundation reimagines the collapse of a galactic empire with a multicultural cast and fearless storytelling overhauls. Though it takes liberties with some facts, it hits the essence of Asimov’s concepts, the vulnerability of civilization, the strength of knowledge, and the gravity of destiny.

1. Pachinko
Min Jin Lee’s Pachinko is one of those novels so impossible to bring to life on screen, until Apple TV+ showed us otherwise. This sweeping, multigenerational drama follows a Korean family from generation to generation across Japan and Korea, from love and loss to identity. It’s cinematic in every frame, every performance felt to the core. Intimate and epic in equal measure, a masterclass in adapting the book’s spirit without sacrificing any greatness on the screen.

And there you have it, ten adaptations which prove Apple TV+ isn’t simply following trends; it’s creating a new benchmark for literary television storytelling. Whether you’re a hardline reader, a weekend viewer, or both, these shows demonstrate that the adaptation can burn every bit as bright as the book.