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Yes, several — and many more are in development.
The story of my books on screen is, in many ways, the story of how television used to work and how it works now.
Kane & Abel was made into a CBS television mini-series in the United States in 1985, starring Peter Strauss as Abel Rosnovski and Sam Neill as William Lowell Kane. It was a serious production for its day — multiple episodes, full network budget, big audiences. The book had been published five years earlier and had become a global bestseller, and the studio bet on a faithful adaptation. They were right to. The series found a large American audience and was followed, the next year, by a BBC mini-series in Britain.
First Among Equals was adapted by Granada Television in 1986 — a ten-part British political drama that took the novel’s four-MP structure and brought it to the screen with the kind of cast British television still knew how to assemble. Not a Penny More, Not a Penny Less was adapted by the BBC in 1990. Both adaptations were of their moment; both, in different ways, have stood up.
What has changed, in the decades since, is the industry. The old “novel sold to studio, single mini-series produced” model has given way to a more complex landscape: streaming services, prestige limited series, international co-productions, rights packages bundled across film and television. To handle this properly, in 2022 I formed The Jeffrey Archer Company, which now manages film and television rights across the entire catalogue — twenty-eight novels, ninety-five short stories, the Prison Diaries, the children’s books, and the more that has accumulated over fifty years.
The most exciting current project is Paramount’s adaptation of Not a Penny More, Not a Penny Less, in development for the book’s 50th anniversary in August 2026. My hope is that screen adaptation and the new edition will introduce the book to a new generation, for enjoyment for readers and viewers who were not yet born when it was first published in 1976.
Several other adaptations are currently in development, including projects on the The Clifton Chronicles,The William Wariwck Novels, andA Matter of Honour as well as on other titles I am not yet able to name. The Jeffrey Archer Company is the right route for anyone wishing to discuss screen rights — production companies, writers, directors, agents.
Media rights deck. A full catalogue with synopses and adaptation potential is available here. Please contact us let us know if you would like to discuss futher.