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How Does Vladimir the TV Series Differ From the Book?

How Does Vladimir the TV Series Differ From the Book?

Sophie VershbowSat, March 7, 2026 at 2:30 PM UTC

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How is Vladimir Different Than the Book? Courtesy of Netflix © 2026

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“I ask this one thing: let me go mad in my own way (Sophocles, Elektra).” So begins Julia May Jonas’ razor-sharp 2022 novel Vladimir, which just dropped as an eight-episode limited series of the same name on Netflix. The story explores issues around sex and power through an unnamed middle-aged narrator (played by Rachel Weisz and credited as “The Protagnoist”) as she navigates teaching in the #MeToo era, her husband’s upcoming Title IX hearing, and an all-consuming obsession with her new colleague––the titular Vladimir (played by Leo Woodall).

While Jonas’ screen-adaptation (she wrote the scripts and served as a showrunner) keeps many key elements of her original book and often pulls in memorable passages directly from the text like, “I’ve always felt the origin of anger in my vagina and am surprised it's not mentioned more in literature,” the show make several notable changes to the plot and character dynamics that serve to create a less-nuanced version for the at-home viewing audience. Here’s where the two diverge––major spoilers ahead!

The narrator’s relationship with her husband

Rachel Weisz and John Slattery star as husband and wife in the new Netflix series Vladimir. Courtesy of Netflix © 2026

Both of the book and TV show narrators are in a long-time open marriage with John (played by John Slattery), a fellow English professor currently awaiting his Title IX hearing for alleged sexual misconduct with undergrad students several years in the past. But the state of those marriages is very different between the book and screen versions. In the book, her and John’s relationship is long-dormant, with the two sleeping in separate bedrooms and taking their meals apart. That’s not the case for Weisz and Slattery, who not only eat and sleep together, but canoodle and tease each other lovingly throughout the show. In the first episode, we see Slattery come up behind Weisz in the kitchen and casually grab her while she’s cooking, whereas the narrator in the book flinches when her husband tries to give her a peck on the cheek. The evolution of the narrator and her husband’s marriage into an active love affair rather than a partnership of the past only sharpens the other ways in which the show makes the narrator more complicit in her husband’s activities.

So has the husband’s… predicament

Rachel Weisz as The Protagonist in Vladimir. Courtesy of Netflix © 2026

The details of John’s predicament are the same in both properties, but the details of the narrator’s involvement in that predicament are wildly different. While the book’s narrator openly opines about her frustrations with the ordeal and how the women involved are handling themselves, she tries as hard as possible to stay out physically of the matter. The show’s narrator actively meddles on behalf of both John and herself at every turn, right away asking the college president’s wife to delay the hearing in order for John to claim his pension at the end of the school year. The show also invents the character of Lila, a former student alleging the narrator withheld a scholarship opportunity in order to punish her for sleeping with John, giving the narrator her own alleged crime to answer for. And if that wasn’t enough, the narrator steals Lila’s scholarship file, burns it, then blackmails her former lover David to cover it up. This overt participation on the part of the show’s narrator turns the question of her complicity from the gray area into screaming fire truck red. We no longer need to sit with the question of whether she’s complicit in John’s actions––one of the central questions of the book––because we have her own more glaring obvious bad acts to focus on.

The details of the affair

Rachel Weisz and Leo Woodall play characters whose affair is slightly different than it was in the novel that inspired the series. Courtesy of Netflix © 2026

It makes sense that the team behind the screen adaptation would have Vladimir be more attracted to the narrator on TV than he is in the book, because when your female lead is played by Rachel Weisz, it’s hard to believe that anyone wouldn’t be attracted to her. At 55, Weisz is just three years younger than the narrator’s stated age in the book (Woodall is 11 years younger than Vlad’s 40), but Weisz is a Hollywood 55, and as great as she is in the role, I found her beauty a distracting deviation from the insecure narrator in the book who is always crash dieting and hiding in flowy fabrics. This shift shows up throughout, with Weisz getting a swimsuit wax and donning a low-cut one-piece bathing suit and denim shorts for her day at the pool with Vlad as opposed to the book’s narrator, who gets an anti-cellulite wrap she’s told won’t fix her cellulite and wears “a turtleneck rash guard and flowy Tibetan wrap pants” for hers.

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While both narrators are unreliable, and we’re meant to question their perception of his alleged flirtation, the show is peppered with many more moments that signal Vlad’s genuine interest in her than we get in the book. Vlad coming to the house to give her a copy of his novel (it’s for John in the book), him asking to put his arm around her in her office, him crashing her class to talk about sex in Edith Wharton novels––all added for the show. Most significant is the near-final scene at the cabin when Vlad asks the narrator to continue their affair into the future, a complete deviation from the pre-fire scene in the book in which Vlad literally runs away from the narrator and her husband because he can’t stand to be around them.

Beyond their physical power dynamic, the show also puts Vlad and the narrator on more equal footing by changing the narrator’s two unregarded novels into one book successful enough to pay for her house with John. The book’s narrator fawns over Vlad’s highly-praised writing, but receives no such courtesy in return, while the show’s Vlad reveals his copy of her novel is marked up with notes like “WIW” (wish I wrote) in the margins. “I’m a little hot for your narrator,” he whispers to the narrator he’s definitely hotter for in this version of his story.

Vladimir: A Novel

at amazon.com

The fiery ending

The ending of the miniseries completely diverges from what goes down in the book. In the show, Vlad, John, and the narrator are all trapped in a fiery cabin together. The narrator manages to get out in the process of rescuing her manuscript, leaving the boys behind. “I call 911, everyone gets out. You don’t believe me?” Weisz says slyly into the camera as the house burns behind her while Lizzo’s “Truth Hurts” begins to play. More so than in the book, it’s unclear whether this scene is real or a figment of her active imagination being written into a scene in her novel. In the book, an exasperated Vladimir comes back from kayaking to find the cabin already on fire, and rescues both the narrator and John from the flames. Rather than walking away haughtily unscathed, the narrator’s manuscript burns up, and both she and John suffer significant third-degree burns that require months of rehabilitation. There’s additional plot revealed in the last chapters of the book, which serves more as an epilogue, but I won’t ruin them for you.

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