Books That Made Their Way to the Movies
Grab the popcorn and chocolate-covered peanuts—some of our favorite books are now our favorite movies.
The Deep End of the Ocean
By Jacquelyn Mitchard In this 1999 film adaptation of Jacquelyn Mitchard's novel—and a 1996 Oprah's Book Club pick—
Michelle Pfeiffer stars as Beth, a mother who struggles with depression after her son is kidnapped as a toddler. Years later, a boy who shows up and asks to mow the lawn turns to be Beth's kidnapped son. Co-starring Treat Williams and Whoopi Goldberg, the movie captures the pain and anguish Beth and her family go through as they struggle to deal with what their son's kidnapping has meant to their lives.
A Map of the World
By Jane Hamilton Alice Goodwin lives with her husband and two daughters on a dairy farm in Wisconsin and is a bit of an outcast in their small community. After her neighbor's daughter drowns in a pond on her property, Alice becomes a scapegoat, fighting charges of child abuse. Sigourney Weaver gives a powerful performance as Alice in this 1999 adaptation of Jane Hamilton's novel, a 1999 Oprah's Book Club pick, and co-stars
Julianne Moore,
Chloë Sevigny and David Strathairn.
White Oleander
By Janet Fitch Astrid, the only child of a single mother who is alternately brilliant but self-obsessed, worships her mother until their world is shattered after Astrid's mother, devestated after she's rejected by a lover, murders him and is sent to jail.
Alison Lohman plays Astrid, the young girl who is subsequently shuttled between foster homes, struggling to find an identity of her own and cope with the circumstances around her. Michelle Pfeiffer,
Renée Zellweger,
Robin Wright Penn and Noah Wyle co-star in this 2002 film, based on Janet Fitch's 1999 book, a 1999 Oprah's Book Club pick.
Where the Heart Is
By Billie Letts Natalie Portman stars as Novalee Nation, who is 17, seven months pregnant and 37 pounds overweight—and now finds herself stranded at a Wal-Mart in Sequoyah, Oklahoma, holding just $7.77 in change in the 2000 adaptation of Billie Letts' 1996 novel. Forced to realize her no-good boyfriend Willy Jack Pickens has left her with empty pockets and empty dreams, Novalee is about to discover treasures hidden in Sequoyah.
Ashley Judd and Stockard Channing co-star.
Where the Heart Is was a 1998 Oprah's Book Club pick.
House of Sand and Fog
By Andre Dubus III Colonel Behrani was a wealthy man in Iran, but now he's a struggling immigrant willing to bet everything he has to restore his family's dignity. Kathy Niccolo is a recovering alcoholic and addict whose house is all she has left, and she refuses to let her hard-won stability slip away from her. Sheriff Lester Burdon, a married man who finds himself falling in love with Kathy, becomes obsessed with helping her fight for justice. The three are brought together by their mutual desire for the same house and are doomed by their inability to understand each other. In this 2003 adaptation of Andre Dubus III's 1999 novel, Sir Ben Kingsley stars as Col. Behrani,
Jennifer Connlley plays the part of Kathy and Ron Eldard rounds out the cast as Lester.
House of Sand and Fog was a 2000 Oprah's Book Club selection.
Cry, the Beloved Country
By Alan Paton Alan Paton's Cry, the Beloved Country, a 2003 Oprah's Book Club pick, explores several powerful themes, among them compassion, forgiveness, humility, racial injustice and prejudice. While the main story line tells the tale of two families struggling to overcome hardship, South Africa is also a main character. The 1995 adaptation stars James Earl Jones, Richard Harris and Charles S. Hutton.
Love in the Time of Cholera
By Gabriel García Márquez How long would you wait for true love?
Love in the Time of Cholera, a 2007 Oprah's Book Club selection adapted for the screen the same year, asks that question and explores love in all its forms.
Javier Bardem stars as the rejected Florentino Ariza, who pines for his true love, Fermina Urbino, played by Giovanna Mezzogiorno. Fermina marries Dr. Juvenal Urbino, played by Benjamin Bratt, much to the consternation of love-sick Florentino, who spends his entire adult life trying to reconcile his feelings for this first love.
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