Netflix's 'His & Hers' Adaptation Made Several Major Changes to the Novel
- - Netflix's 'His & Hers' Adaptation Made Several Major Changes to the Novel
Emma FraserJanuary 11, 2026 at 11:00 PM
0
How Netflixâs âHis & Hersâ Changed the Novel Eli Joshua AdĂ©/Netflix
"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links."
Spoilers below.
Ever since Gillian Flynnâs Gone Girl hit bookshelves more than a decade ago, itâs become the gold standard for twisty thrillersâparticularly those that really want to pull the rug out from under the readerâs feet. In the years after Gone Girlâs dramatic success story, publishers have embraced all manner of unreliable narrators, which, in turn, have become the lead protagonists of subsequent movie and TV adaptations. Alice Feeneyâs bestselling 2020 novel His & Hers fits this model, making it an obvious choice for a new six-part Netflix limited series starring Jon Bernthal and Tessa Thompson as the titular him and her, Jack and Anna.
His & Hers has all the ingredients of a fast-paced crime story: gruesome murders; personal connections between the investigator and the victim; a tense and tragic backstory; salacious affairs; and passionate chemistry. Feeneyâs book is a page-turner I couldnât put down, with chapters alternating between Jackâs (his) and Annaâs (hers) perspectives and the killer serving as a third, unnamed narrator who appears sporadically throughout the novel. I thought I had the twist pegged from early on, and I felt incredibly smug about itâŠuntil I was proved very wrong.
The Netflix adaptation of His & Hers retains that shocking twistâthe killer is, in fact, Annaâs motherâbut writer and executive producer William Oldroyd has made considerable changes to the setting, relationships, and even the suspects themselves. Although Thompson has demonstrated she can pull off a British accent (she was excellent in Nia Decostaâs Hedda, set in 1950s England), she doesnât need to flex the skill for His & Hers, as the storyâs location has shifted from London and the fictional Surrey village of Blackdown to Atlanta and the real Georgia town of Dahlonega. There, TV journalist Anna Andrews returns to her hometown to report on a homicide, for which Detective Jack Harper serves as lead investigator. The pair share an intimate past, as well as a complicated history with the murdered woman, Rachel Hopkins (Jamie Tisdale).
His & Hers by Alice Feeney
$10.64 at amazon.com
As His & Hers often repeats via Annaâs voiceover narration, there are at least two sides to every storyâand this means someone is usually lying. The book-to-screen adaptation adds further sides to the story, making tweaks (and, in some cases, significant departures) to add layers to the bookâs characters and conflicts. Below are the most notable and essential differences between Feeneyâs bestseller and the Netflix series.
Netflix - NetflixAnnaâs Return-to-Work
In Feeneyâs novel, Anna is a BBC newsreader whoâs been anchoring the lunchtime slot for two years, covering for her colleague Cat Jones, whoâs on extended maternity leave. Annaâs world is upended when Cat returns to work, causing Anna to lose the dream job that was never officially hers. Itâs Cat who suggests that Anna cover the news of a body found in Blackdown, though Anna is reluctant to return to her hometown, which is full of painful memories.
In the TV series, itâs Anna herself who pushes for permission to cover the crime in Dahlonega, and she appears to know more about the victim before she even arrives back in town. While Book Anna only took a short amount of time off after the death of her baby, her Netflix counterpart has taken a year-long unofficial hiatusâbut is now ready to front the news again. Having been absent for an extended period, Anna canât walk straight back into her old news-anchor role. Although her boss is reluctant to give her a field reporter gig, Anna talks her way into the job.
Netflix also changes Catâs name to Lexy Jones (Rebecca Rittenhouse) to hide that Lexy is Annaâs former childhood friend, Catherine Kelly. In both versions of the story, Anna has no idea that the co-worker she loathes is, in fact, Catherine, another girl who was in the woods the awful night of Annaâs 16th birthday.
Both versions of Anna ultimately use the discovery of Rachelâs body (and their knowledge of the local landscape) to give their career a much-needed boost. Like her novel counterpart, Netflix Anna is reluctant to see old faces but eager to get back on air, and the first time Anna sees Jack is at the crime scene. However, in the book, Feeneyâs Jack and Anna are divorced, whereas Thompson and Bernthalâs characters are estranged but still married.
NetflixAnnaâs Alcoholism
Another significant change from the book to the show is how much Anna drinks. Book Anna keeps bottles of booze in her purse and slugs white wine with breakfast. (Never red wineâthe staining is too noticeable.) Thanks to her drinking, Anna is frequently uncertain about what happened the night before, which adds to the unreliable-narrator element of the book (and instantly brought to mind another popular literary thriller, The Girl on the Train).
One example of this dynamic in play: In Feeneyâs novel, Anna passes out in a rustic room above a local pub (the TV show opts for a more traditional hotel setting) and wakes to find her room tidied. Anna believes she cleaned it in her drunken state. Later in the book, we learn it was, in fact, Annaâs mother, Alice, who did the cleaning, even leaving water on Annaâs bedside table to ensure her daughter stayed hydratedâwhile also giving her daughter incentive to doubt her own memories. Near the end of the book, Feeney offers a suggestion that Anna thinks sheâs the killerâand blames her blackouts for why she canât remember.
The show does away with this explanation for Annaâs supposed unreliability. While she does down half a bottle of wine early in the season, itâs a big misdirect. Annaâs alcohol intake is never too excessive (nor does it carry over into breakfast). Her clear head ensures thereâs no ambiguity at the end of the finale: Alice confesses everything to Anna in a letter describing why she killed her daughterâs frenemies.
NetflixRachelâs Husbandâs Role
In the novel, Rachel is married to an old guy for his money; we donât even meet him firsthand. Detective Priya Patel (who, in the show, is played by Sunita Mani) informs Jack that Rachelâs husband isnât a suspect because, well, heâs 82 years old and bedridden. The Netflix adaptation ditches this quick dismissal, instead choosing to point a finger directly at Rachelâs cocky, middle-aged, wealthy husband, Clyde (Chris Bauer).
Netflix Clyde connects the dots among the different players and offers Jack someone else to latch onto as a person of interest. Both men are assholes, and they poke and prod at each other in a desperate display of toxic masculinity. A video on Rachelâs phone (that Jack has to find an inventive way to get her body to unlock) proves that Rachel has an incriminating video of Clyde. Jack thinks Helen and Rachel were blackmailing Clyde, but itâs actually Lexy theyâre extorting. While Clyde didnât care too much for his wife, he isnât, in fact, a killer.
Making Rachelâs spouse a prominent suspect in the TV series makes narrative senseâthe husband is, after all, often the first on any suspect list. Casting Bauer in this role also makes the dick-measuring scenes worthwhile. Not only is he a great antagonist opposite Bernthal, but as a fan of The Wire, I was giddy when he appeared in a scene with Pablo Schreiber, who plays Bauerâs on-screen nephew in season 2 of David Simonâs beloved HBO crime series.
NetflixThe Hook-Ups
The Netflix adaptation of His & Hers is full of characters making bad choices, including Anna sleeping with her cameraman, Richard Jones (Schreiber), after their first broadcast together. Part of her incentive is to stick it to Lexy, Richardâs wife, whom Anna thinks stole her job, but sheâs keen to hurt Jack, too.
In the novel, Anna has already slept with Richard prior to the events of the present day, and she doesnât have sex with him again during the book itselfâthough Jack is still jealous of their attraction. (As a side note: Book Anna doesnât know that Richard is married to Cat Jones until the showdown at Catâs former family home.)
The TV adaptation cranks up the heat between these characters, introducing a new rendezvous between Anna and Richard in the present timeline; it also showcases Anna and Jack sleeping together again. In the book, the pair divorce in the aftermath of baby Charlotteâs death, with Anna staying in London and Jack returning home to Blackdown. They have no contact until the homicide case, and itâs only after the novelâs climax that thereâs reconciliation between them.
But this is Netflix weâre talking about, so, of course, the romantic drama is kicked up a notch. Sexual tension bubbles over between the still-married couple in the fourth episode, when Jack and Annaâs anger, resentment, and bitterness turn into apologies and desire. Anna explains why she left, and she tells Jack that the time alone was part of her grieving process. âI didnât want you to make me better, Jack!â she reasons. Their hugging and sobbing turn into a kiss and then more, underscoring the chemistry between the lead actors. By the time the series ends, they are back together and expecting a child.
One side plot that the TV show rightly cuts out is Jack thinking that his new partner, Priya, has a thing for him. While this dynamic gives readers a window into Jackâs view of himselfâhe thinks heâs hot shit, basicallyâit also serves to make Priya seem unnecessarily attentive to her man-child boss. Netflix Priya is focused and diligent, making more headway than Jack and eventually cracking his connection to Rachel. Book Priya also reads as more suspicious. (At one point, she leaves while making dinner for JackâŠat the exact same time Zoe is murdered. This was a red herring I fell for, leading me to believe Priya was the killer.) There are no sloppy, drunk kisses between Jack and Priya in the Netflix series, which is a wise choice.
NetflixThe Big Showdown
Before the fight-to-the-death in the TV showâs finale, Jackâs deadbeat sister, Zoe, worries she might become the killerâs next victim, but a distracted Jack brushes her off, insisting sheâll be fine. (How he rose to the rank of detective is, frankly, beyond me.) Zoeâs daughter, Meg, is at a sleepover, and is spared the trauma of being at home while her mother is murdered. In the book, Meg isnât so lucky. Instead, sheâs given a sedative so she sleeps while her mom bleeds to death.
From here, the book continues to resemble a slasher movie as it moves into its climactic showdown scene. Book Anna only enters Richardâs in-lawsâs secluded lake house when she hears him scream. Inside, she finds a barely breathing Richard with a severe head injury and multiple stab wounds (which lead to his eventual death), and she discovers Cat Jones hanging from a noose. But Cat isnât dead yet; it appears sheâs set this trap specifically to kill Anna. Cat frees herself from the rope, and Anna frantically runs away from the house. Outside, she finds her (supposedly) dementia-addled mother stumbling around in the dark.
Meanwhile, Jack has made his way to the lake house with Priya in pursuit. Priya shoots Jack in the shoulder, and in the ongoing melĂ©e, Cat stabs Alice. Anna escapes with her mother and then accidentally runs Cat over, deducing that Cat committed the murders as revenge for what happened in the woods during Annaâs 16th birthday party. (In the book, it is Cat who was raped that awful night.)
As it turns out, Book Cat seems to have nine livesâAnnaâs car doesnât kill her. Her lives only, finally, run out when Cat lifts her knife as though to stab AnnaâŠand Priya shoots her dead.
The TV version does away with most of this choreography, wisely streamlining the action by pitting Anna solely against Lexy/Catherine and not including Alice. Nor does Priya shoot Jackâthough she is still the one who kills Lexy/Catherine! Finally, Richard doesnât die in Netflixâs adaptation; instead, heâs arrested for assisting Lexy.
NetflixAliceâs Secret
In the TV show, Anna definitively learns the real killerâs identity: Itâs her mother, Alice. The novel's ending is much less conclusive re: what Anna does or doesnât know about her murderous parent.
In Feeneyâs novel, Alice confesses to the reader that sheâs indeed behind the bloodshed, and her motive stems from a discovery in her daughterâs old bedroom. There, Alice found a suicide note written by teen Anna, one that reveals the events that went on in the woods all those years ago: Catherine was lured out to the forest by teenage âfriendsâ Rachel, Zoe, and Helen, where she was gang-raped. Anna blamed herself for not intervening, and she fled town to escape her guilt. Thus, Alice blames Rachel, Zoe, and Helen for causing her daughter to disappear, and she decides to murder themâand to try to pin the blame on Cat.
In the end, Book Anna isnât entirely convinced Catherine is the killer. Instead, she wonders if the killer might be herâthat she blacked out and committed the crimes while drunk. Meanwhile, Book Alice considers whether her daughter might have figured out the truthâŠbut Feeney ultimately leaves their fates ambiguous enough for the reader to decide.
In contrast, the TV series makes Aliceâs involvementâand Annaâs understanding of that involvementâcrystal-clear. In Annaâs bedroom, Alice discovers a tape that depicts the events of her 16th birthday, but it is, in fact, Annaâs own rape that is captured on the camcorder, not Catherineâs. This compels Alice to act with bloody vengeance.
The Netflix show ends with an image of a united mother and daughter, both of whom know the whole truth about each otherâs experiences. While the novelâs open-ended conclusion is provocative, the adaptation's final moments are more satisfying because Alice doesnât come across as psychopathic; despite the violence she has wrought, her motive is clear and her love for her daughter is keenly understood. Much like the events at the heart of His & Hers, there is clearly more than one way to tell this story.
You Might Also Like
The 15 Best Organic And Clean Shampoos For Any And All Hair Types
100 Gifts That Are $50 Or Under (And Look Way More Expensive Than They Actually Are)
Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ