Indeed, my novel has a glossary and a couple of appendices simply because of the amount of music terminology in general, and organ terminology in particular. And it's not even science fiction.
Similarly, Sherlock Holmes and Dracula were not period pieces when first published. They were contemporary thrillers.
It would be challenging to rework a story whose premise/solution depended on incomplete or since-debunked beliefs, inferior technology, etc. I guess that's why a lot of those Holmes radio shows say "this episode was suggested by a detail in the Holmes story _____" instead of directly adapting a particular story beat for beat.

Check out the latest adaptation of Father Brown. You can find it on BritBox, Hoopla, and Kanopy.More likely there are only 56 short stories and 4 novels, so a weekly radio show would run out of episodes pretty soon if it did direct adaptations. Plus prose and radio are different media with different strengths, so some stories might be harder to adapt than others -- and of course, many might be too long or too short to fit the running time. Plus, of course, writers like to write, not just copy. An adaptation is an opportunity to be creative and find a fresh way to tell a story.
Tubi has the 1954 Holmes TV series with Ronald Howard and H. Marion Crawford, the first and only American Holmes TV series until Elementary. It's pretty authentic to the characters, but only a few of its episodes are adaptations of Doyle stories. The first episode starts out as a faithful adaptation of Holmes and Watson's first meeting in A Study in Scarlet, but then segues into an original, shorter mystery.
Yes, this is one of the things that bothers me when people complain that War of the Worlds adaptations are being unfaithful when they update the setting. Wells wasn't writing a period piece about aliens invading the Earth; Wells was writing a story about what would happen if aliens invaded your country, the most powerful country on Earth. For all its faults, this is one thing the Spielberg film gets exactly right. The most "faithful" WotW adaptation is set at the time of production.Similarly, Sherlock Holmes and Dracula were not period pieces when first published. They were contemporary thrillers.
It's only modern audiences who associate them with gaslit nostalgia, and who may cry foul if the stories are updated to contemporary times.
Yes, this is one of the things that bothers me when people complain that War of the Worlds adaptations are being unfaithful when they update the setting. Wells wasn't writing a period piece about aliens invading the Earth; Wells was writing a story about what would happen if aliens invaded your country, the most powerful country on Earth. For all its faults, this is one thing the Spielberg film gets exactly right. The most "faithful" WotW adaptation is set at the time of production.
So, has anyone done a post-Jazz-Age adaptation of The Great Gatsby set in the production’s own era? For all the 1920s specifics, I feel like the plot would translate pretty well, class concerns very much included.In order to experience such a book the way the original readers did, you'd have to put yourself in their place. Changing the setting bypasses the need to be informed about the historical context. If your world is nothing like theirs and hasn't been for some time (socially, technologically, politically), something is lost in translation.
And if I ever do that, or if I ever have, please call me on it, and make me either defend my actions/words, or apologize for them.. . . many people never think about a story beyond the surface level.
Hey, I liked Father Dowling. I really liked Tracy Nelson's streetwise nun, "Sister Steve," and I liked Tom Bosley in anything he did, and all of the supporting cast (I'd liked James Stephens ever since I first saw him as James Hart in the Showtime-produced second season of The Paper Chase). And if Father Dowling was a ripoff of Father Brown, then blame Ralph McInerny, because he really did write Father Dowling books, quite a few of them, between 1977 (over a decade before the series debuted) and 2009.An example of doing this poorly was the Father Dowling Mysteries
I wouldn't say it would ever be wrong to do that; I just think "faithfulness" is the wrong attribute to claim for it!The text of War of the Worlds thankfully does not get updated to be set in whatever year you're reading it, and along those lines I would still like to see a well-done, "closer to the book" adaptation of it some day. I'm not just interested in the central premise, I'm interested in the setting. The world and people that no longer exists.
The only approach that I would regard as "wrong" is one that is done with no respect for the original.
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