The Narrow Road to the Deep North: the novel behind the TV series

Richard Flanagan's 'The Narrow Road to the Deep North' is receiving fresh acclaim after the premiere of its television adaptation.
The Narrow Road to the Deep North.

Audiences and critics are relishing the release of The Narrow Road to the Deep North, an adaptation of Richard Flanagan’s historical novel. The book was published in 2013 and won the Man Booker prize. The release of the series and the marking of ANZAC Day make for the perfect moment to revisit the celebrated novel. 

What is ‘The Narrow Road to the Deep North’ about? 

The Narrow Road To The Deep North. Image: Amazon Mgm Studios.
The Narrow Road to the Deep North. Image: Amazon MGM Studios.

The novel follows Dorrigo Evans, an Australian surgeon and reluctant war hero, as he recalls his harrowing experience as a prisoner of war on the Thai-Burma Death Railway during World War II.

Through a fragmented, lyrical narrative, we move between three states. First, the brutal camp life, where Dorrigo fights to keep his fellow POWs alive under horrific Japanese conditions. Second, a forbidden pre-war love affair with his uncle’s young wife, Amy, which haunts him for decades. And finally, post-war fame and personal guilt, as Dorrigo becomes a national figure, but internally battles shame, infidelity and a deep disconnection from the people around him.

At its heart, the novel is about memory, trauma, love, survival and the blurred line between heroism and failure. The title is a nod to a 17th century Japanese travel diary by poet Bashō, reflecting the novel’s meditation on transience and the long, winding path of human suffering.

Why did Richard Flanagan write ‘The Narrow Road to the Deep North’? 

The Narrow Road To The Deep North. Image: Prime Video.
The Narrow Road to the Deep North. Image: Prime Video.

Flanagan’s father, Archie Flanagan, was a survivor of the Thai-Burma Death Railway, one of the most brutal wartime projects of World War II. Over 100,000 people died there – prisoners of war and civilians alike – and his father was one of the Australian POWs who lived through it.

Flanagan struggled for 12 years to write the novel. He started and abandoned five different versions before finding the form that worked. He later said he wrote the book to try to understand what his father and his generation endured, and why it marked them for life.

Tragically — and poetically — his father died on the day Flanagan finished the book.

Was Richard Flanagan involved in the making of the series ‘The Narrow Road to the Deep North’?

The Narrow Road To The Deep North. Image: Amazon Mgm Studios.
The Narrow Road to the Deep North. Image: Amazon MGM Studios. Streaming April.

Flanagan is listed as Executive Producer on the series, but he didn’t pen the screenplay or serve as director. He largely supported the creative efforts of director Justin Kurzel and screenwriter Shaun Grant to bring the novel to the screen. 

ScreenHub: The Narrow Road to the Deep North review: a new Australian classic

ScreenHub gave The Narrow Road to the Deep North TV adaptation a five-star review, as follows:

‘Why at the beginning of things is there always light?’ So opens Tasmanian author Richard Flanagan’s elegiac, Booker Prize-winning 2013 novel The Narrow Road to the Deep North.

Dedicated to his father’s unimaginable suffering as a Japanese prisoner-of-war, forced under despicable conditions to forge the Thai-Burma railway during WWII, the book is mired in mud and blood. But even in the darkest places, light never completely dims. Pure energy, it simply changes form. With time itself captured in this eternal loop, the end is always near the beginning.

The Narrow Road To The Deep North. Image: Prime Video.
The Narrow Road to the Deep North. Image: Prime Video.

A band of gold captured in Snowtown and True History of the Kelly Gang director Justin Kurzel’s astonishing adaptation.

Penned by regular writing partner Shaun Grant, Prime Video series The Narrow Road to the Deep North harnesses these electromagnetic waves, condensing Flanagan’s weighty tome into an equally incandescent triumph.

Watch The Narrow Road to the Deep North trailer.

Opening on the Syrian campaign in 1941, a hellish glow flickers on the faces of Australian soldiers led by Dorrigo Evans (Saltburn and Priscilla star Jacob Elordi) as the 7th regiment regroups after an unseen clash with Vichy French forces. There’s First Nations man Frank (The Last Days of the Space Age actor Thomas Weatherall), big lug ‘Tiny’ (David Howell), doe-eyed Rabbit (an achingly emotive William Lodder) and joker Jack Rainbow (Bump lead Christian Byers).

Their ebullient camaraderie after rescuing an orphaned boy is extinguished by the cold grey chill of morn, with the kid and one of their company dead. But whatever hell they face pales into insignificance after their capture by the Japanese forces following 1942’s also unshown Battle of Java. This is a story held close in its intimate moments.

Read the full Narrow Road to the Deep North review

David Burton is a writer from Meanjin, Brisbane. David also works as a playwright, director and author. He is the playwright of over 30 professionally produced plays. He holds a Doctorate in the Creative Industries.