Michael Connelly is behind the literary source material for both Netflix’sThe Lincoln Lawyerand Prime Video’sBosch, two of the biggest streaming successes of the past decade. That each of the major TV adaptations of Connelly’s work is among the most watched shows of the streaming age, demonstrates his knack for creating compelling crime-thriller characters, and coming up with enough plotlines to span several seasons of gripping drama.

But it’s not just Mickey Haller and Harry Bosch that Michael Connelly writes about. The author has several more novel protagonists whose stories revolve around the investigation of crimes, includingRenee Ballard from Prime Video’s upcomingBoschspinoff. Another brilliant Connelly character who hasn’t yet received his own TV adaptation is Jack McEvoy, an investigative reporter whose stories draw on the author’s own journalistic experiences (viaMichael Connelly’s official website). McEvoy’s first novel appearance predates Mickey Haller’s, making him one of the longest-serving central heroes in Michael Connelly’s literary universe.

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Jack McEvoy Should Get A TV Show After The Lincoln Lawyer & Bosch

McEvoy Is One Of Michael Connelly’s Longest-Running Novel Protagonists

Jack McEvoy first appeared in Michael Connelly’s 1996 novel,The Poet, which was only the fifth book the novelist had published to that point. It charts McEvoy’s attempts to uncover the culprit of his identical twin brother’s murder, despite being a crime reporter for the Rocky Mountain News, rather than an actual detective. Like he does in the books which inspiredBoschandThe Lincoln LawyerandBosch, Connelly unravelsThe Poet’s mystery with his trademark sense of pacing and suspense.

Almost three decades after this first McEvoy novel, the character is set to co-star alongsideThe Lincoln Lawyer’s titular character Mickey Hallerin Connelly’s second novel of 2025,The Proving Ground. This book will bethe fourth to feature McEvoy, and should demonstrate just how well he’d work in the TV universethat Haller now inhabits. What’s more,The Lincoln Lawyer’s clever workarounds when adapting Michael Connolly’s first-person Mickey Haller narratives illustrate that a TV show about Jack McEvoy should have no trouble overcoming this potential obstacle.

The Lincoln Lawyer & Bosch Prove More Michael Connelly Books Should Be Adapted

Every Michael Connelly Adaptation So Far Has Been A Major Success

The Lincoln Lawyerbecoming2024’s top streaming show in the US, and the overwhelming successBoschshows on Prime Video, are living proof that virtually any Michael Connelly story would likely find a massive TV audience. Just as Renee Ballard is the natural successor to Harry Bosch on Prime, it shouldn’t be a massive stretch to imagineJack McEvoy showing up in the same streaming universe as these detectives, or as defense lawyer Mickey Haller, some time in the near future.

The economy of plot digression, interweaving subplots, and perfectly-timed twists in Michael Connelly’s novels mean they’re almost ready-made for hour-long TV episodes.

Connelly’s stories are the ideal source material for engrossing crime dramas, with their economy of plot digression, interweaving subplots, and perfectly-timed twists almost ready-made for hour-long TV episodes. It’s scarcely believable thatno studio has seized their opportunity to adapt the author’s McEvoy novelswhile the rights remain available, although it can’t be long before one of the big streaming players makes their move.

Could There Ever Be A True Michael Connelly TV Universe?

It’s Up To Amazon And Netflix To Decide

One of the barriers facing any studio looking to produce a new adaptation of Michael Connelly’s stories is the overlapping character arcs between the different novel series of the author’s various protagonists. Just asJack McEvoy is about to show up alongside Mickey Haller in Connelly’s upcoming release, Harry Bosch crosses paths with Haller in several novels, and FBI profiler Terry McCaleb appears alongside Bosch in one of the two books in which he features.

The fact that all of Connelly’s characters apparently share a single literary universe and occasionally show up in one another’s story isn’t necessarily a problem for TV adaptations. On the contrary, it should be an asset to studios that makes the author’s work an even more attractive proposition, sincewhichever studio gets their hands on the screen rights could, in theory, make a unified TV universecontaining not one, but severally, wildly popular literary heroes. Unfortunately, though, things have turned out differently in practice.

The screen rights forHarry Bosch and Mickey Hallerhave been split up and sold to rival streaming giants Amazon Prime and Netflix, meaning that Michael Connelly’s two most important characters are now mutually exclusive as far as TV universes go.Unless Amazon and Netflix come to an unprecedented dealto override the terms of their respective exclusivity agreements with Connolly’s book publishers, we may never see Harry Bosch and Mickey Haller onscreen together.

WithThe Lincoln LawyerandBoscheffectively taking place in separate TV worlds, it could be that Jack McEvoy, Renee Ballard and Terry McCaleb don’t get to exist in the same screen universe, either. Michael Connelly fans will hope that Amazon and Netflix can hash out a compromise to get around this problem at some point, but history suggests that this hope will most likely be in vain.

The Lincoln Lawyer

Cast

The Lincoln Lawyer: This legal drama follows Mickey Haller, a Los Angeles defense attorney known for operating from his Lincoln Town Car, as he revives his career after an accident by taking on a high-profile murder case. The series explores challenges within the justice system and Haller’s pursuit of truth.