Feed Your Nostalgia: 5 Books Paired with Classic TV Favorites

Molly Bagshaw
February 20 2020
Share Feed Your Nostalgia: 5 Books Paired with Classic TV Favorites

In the golden age of television, I find myself more drawn to revisiting old favorites. Rather than navigate the complexity of loving an anti-hero, I prefer to be comforted by laugh tracks, wholesome family-focused sitcoms, and cozy mysteries. And while I do love rereading classics, there’s nothing more thrilling to me than finding a new book. So behold the perfect combination: new books inspired by old shows.

This post was originally published on GetLiterary.com.

Kiss the Girls and Make Them Cry
by Mary Higgins Clark

Murder, She Wrote

Oh, what I would give to receive a withering look from Jessica Fletcher. I watched so much Murder, She Wrote with my mom as a kid and recently rediscovered the show during a trip to England where it was always on the hotel TV. If you, too, love a female sleuth slash writer, I recommend Kiss the Girls and Make Them Cry by Mary Higgins Clark. In this suspenseful thriller, journalist Gina Kane investigates the shocking death of a young woman who had just given the reporter a major tip about widespread misbehavior of top-tier men at a major television news network. As the company tries to cover up allegations of sexual misconduct—and another female employee winds up dead—Gina digs deeper to uncover the nefarious truth.

Amazon logo Audible logo Barnes & Noble logo Books a Million logo Google Play logo iBooks logo Bookshop logo
Kiss the Girls and Make Them Cry
Mary Higgins Clark

Amazon logo Audible logo Barnes & Noble logo Books a Million logo Google Play logo iBooks logo Bookshop logo

MENTIONED IN:

Feed Your Nostalgia: 5 Books Paired with Classic TV Favorites

By Molly Bagshaw | February 20, 2020

6 Must-Read Books from the Queen of Suspense

By Elizabeth Breeden | November 14, 2019

Close
The Lost History of Dreams
by Kris Waldherr

The Addams Family

As a millennial woman, my introduction to The Addams Family was via the 1991 movie starring Christina Ricci as Wednesday Addams. (Between The Addams Family, Casper, and Now and Then, Christina Ricci really was my idol.) What I love about watching the 60s TV series is the realization that the Addams are sweet, stable, and wholesome; they completely subvert all expectations of being a morbid, macabre family. This is most prominent in the depiction of Gomez and Morticia’s loving (and dare I say sexy?) relationship. If you’re in the market for a Gothic romance in honor of Gomez and Morticia, try Kris Waldherr’s The Lost History of Dreams. Haunting and suspenseful, this wholly romantic novel follows post-mortem photographer Robert Highstead in 1850s London as he recounts his recently deceased cousin’s ill-fated marriage. Doing so forces him to reckon with his own imperfect marriage and, in turn, compels the reader to confront their own understanding of love.

Amazon logo Audible logo Barnes & Noble logo Books a Million logo Google Play logo iBooks logo Bookshop logo Libro.fm logo
The Lost History of Dreams
Kris Waldherr

THE LOST HISTORY OF DREAMS is an eerie gothic ghost story, love story, and haunting mystery all in one. Waldherr spins the tale of a post-mortem photographer whose tragic wife remains at the periphery of his life as he learns and records the story of dead poet Hugh de Bonne and Hugh’s own lost love. The divisions between past and present and life and death blur as the mystery unfolds in a moody Victorian English landscape.

Amazon logo Audible logo Barnes & Noble logo Books a Million logo Google Play logo iBooks logo Bookshop logo Libro.fm logo

MENTIONED IN:

November eBook Deals: 10 Must-Reads You’ll Be Thankful For

By Off the Shelf Staff | November 3, 2023

12 Beautifully Written Books Kate Quinn Recommends

By Off the Shelf Staff | March 17, 2022

Author Picks: 6 Historical Fiction Reads with a Magical Twist

By Melodie Winawer | November 10, 2021

8 Mesmerizing Gothic Novels to Read While the Winter Winds Blow

By Maddie Nelson | February 17, 2021

The Past Is Killer: 7 Grisly Reads for Alienist Fans

By Sara Roncero-Menendez | June 24, 2020

Feed Your Nostalgia: 5 Books Paired with Classic TV Favorites

By Molly Bagshaw | February 20, 2020

Close
The Empty Family
by Colm Toibin

Frasier

The title of this short story collection by Colm Toibin, The Empty Family, is by no means a commentary on the Crane family of the TV show Frasier. In the pilot episode, psychologist Dr. Frasier Crane has just moved back to Seattle, leaving his young son and ex-wife behind in Boston, and reluctantly invites his somewhat estranged and blue-collar father to move in with him. But as the show moves forward, so does Frasier’s relationships with his family and friends, creating a large and happy family (with all their many idiosyncrasies). Toibin’s gorgeous short story collection, full of master character studies and references to classic literature, could be found on Frasier’s own bookshelf.

Amazon logo Barnes & Noble logo Books a Million logo Bookshop logo
The Empty Family
Colm Toibin

On the heels of his bestselling and award-winning novel Brooklyn, Colm Tóibín returns with a stunning collection of stories—now available in paperback—“a book that’s both a perfect introduction to Tóibín and, for longtime fans, a bracing pleasure” ( The Seattle Times ).

Critics praised Brooklyn as a “beautifully rendered portrait of Brooklyn and provincial Ireland in the 1950s.” In The Empty Family, Tóibín has extended his imagination further, offering an incredible range of periods and characters—people linked by love, loneliness, desire—“the unvarying dilemmas of the human heart” ( The Observer, UK).

In the breathtaking long story “The Street,” Tóibín imagines a relationship between Pakistani workers in Barcelona—a taboo affair in a community ruled by obedience and silence. In “Two Women,” an eminent and taciturn Irish set designer takes a job in her homeland and must confront emotions she has long repressed. “Silence” is a brilliant historical set piece about Lady Gregory, who tells the writer Henry James a confessional story at a dinner party.

Reviewed on the front page of The New York Times Book Review, The Empty Family will further cement Tóibín’s status as “his generation’s most gifted writer of love’s complicated, contradictory power” ( Los Angeles Times ).

Amazon logo Barnes & Noble logo Books a Million logo Bookshop logo

MENTIONED IN:

Feed Your Nostalgia: 5 Books Paired with Classic TV Favorites

By Molly Bagshaw | February 20, 2020

Close
This Tender Land
by William Kent Krueger

Little House on the Prairie

I’ll be honest here and admit that what I remember most from Little House on the Prairie is the episode where Mary inexplicably wakes up blind, having lost her sight while sleeping. I had recurring nightmares as a child that this would happen to me and it wasn’t until YEARS later that I realized the source of this fear. Now my primary relationship with Little House on the Prairie is catching the last five minutes of an episode before Frasier starts. What I’ve picked up from these short segments, however, is that although the Ingalls family is the primary focus of the series, each episode is more about their community-at-large. The classic Little House series reminds me of the sweeping, big-hearted novel This Tender Land by William Kent Krueger. Set in 1930s Minnesota, This Tender Land follows four young children as they escape the Lincoln School—a school where Native American children are sent to be educated after being forcibly separated from their parents —and search for their own home as they trek to the Mississippi. Along the way they meet a cast of characters who help them find themselves as they find a place to belong.

Amazon logo Barnes & Noble logo Books a Million logo Google Play logo iBooks logo Bookshop logo
This Tender Land
William Kent Krueger

Amazon logo Barnes & Noble logo Books a Million logo Google Play logo iBooks logo Bookshop logo
Close
Don’t Let Me Down
by Erin Hosier

Roseanne

There’s so much to love about the original Roseanne—it’s quick-witted, the characters are well-developed, and no matter the severity of a conflict or how often everyone ribs each other, there’s never a doubt that this is a family whose members love each other. I particularly enjoy watching Dan navigate the very different relationship he has with each of his daughters. His bond with tomboy Darlene comes more naturally to him whereas he has to try a bit harder to connect with Becky—but with both, you know he’s trying his best. In her powerful and hilarious memoir Don’t Let Me Down, Erin Hosier details her loving yet complicated relationship with her father. New in paperback, this book is a coming-of-age story both Darlene and Becky would appreciate.

Amazon logo Barnes & Noble logo Books a Million logo Bookshop logo
Don’t Let Me Down
Erin Hosier

Clap your hands, rattle your jewelry, and twist and shout for Erin Hosier’s Don’t Let Me Down….Fierce, catchy, hilarious—like your favorite vinyl punk 45—this bird can sing. A glorious memoir.” — Brando Skyhorse, author of Take This Man

This fierce and witty memoir about a father-daughter relationship “is a beautifully written, honest, and often funny account of what it is to grow up as a woman” (Nancy Balbirer, author of A Marriage in Dog Years).

Erin Hosier’s coming-of-age was full of contradictions. Born into the turbulent 1970s, she was raised in rural Ohio by lapsed hippies who traded 1960s rock ‘n’ roll for 1950s-era Christian hymns. Her mother’s newfound faith was rooted in a desire to manage her husband’s mood swings, which could alternately fill the house with music or with violence.

With the Beatles providing the soundtrack, Erin grew up adoring her larger than life father, Jack. Together, they bonded over their iconic songs, even as they inspired Erin to question authority—both her father’s and others’.

Don’t Let Me Down is about a brave girl trying to navigate family secrets and tragedies and escape from small-town small-mindedness. With her lyrical and tender writing, Erin “doesn’t shy away from the complications and contradictions of love, sharing both the best and the worst of her volatile, vibrant father and detailing—in her singular and often hilarious voice, the difficulty of leaving childhood, home, and the people who loved you first” (Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeney, New York Times bestselling author of The Nest).

Amazon logo Barnes & Noble logo Books a Million logo Bookshop logo

MENTIONED IN:

Feed Your Nostalgia: 5 Books Paired with Classic TV Favorites

By Molly Bagshaw | February 20, 2020

Close

You must be logged in to add books to your shelf.

Please log in or sign up now.