- Some Kind of Wonderful by John Hughes (draft script, 1986)
- Any background info or trivia on one of my favourite films is welcome, so I was delighted to stumble across somekindofwonderful.org, a fan site from, I would guess, 20 years ago but amazingly still up and running. There's some amusing bits and pieces there (including the fact that there was a novelisation!) but by far the most interesting thing is this early draft script containing numerous differences from the eventual film. It casts light on some of the more jarring non-sequiturs in the film (like, why does Watts suddenly ask Keith if he misses her?) and contains a somewhat different (and frankly, unconvincing) ending. I'm not going to pretend Some Kind of Wonderful is a classic film but I'm very fond of it and this is great stuff.
- The Diary of a Bookseller by Shaun Bythell (2017)
- To start with, this didn't seem very promising - the unvarnished, day-to-day trivia of the man who runs (and owns) the "largest second-hand bookshop in Scotland". But its low-key charm and humour grew on me, and the never-ending series of clueless customers, while I am sure intensely frustrating in real life, is dryly amusing on the page.
- The Making of Another Major Motion Picture Masterpiece by Tom Hanks (2023)
- Here's an interesting combination of approaches: ostensibly an account of the making of a real film, written (mostly) as if it was a novel, but actually completely fictional. Except that - not least because Tom Hanks is the author - I'm certain that pretty much all of this is based on real events in some way. Even though there's no real plot - we just taken through the process of making a film - it's entertaining and compelling, and gives a brilliant insight into the sheer effort and logistics involved in the undertaking (and quite a lot about the madness and egos, too). And the fact that Tom Hanks, when he's not busy being one the best screen actors in history, can write this well is a bit like learning that your dad is a brilliant sculptor in his spare time, but you only just found out.
- Knightshade: The Lathe of Firefall by "Bill Johnson" (Tom Hanks?) (2023)
- Brilliantly, the whole script for the film being made in The Making of Another Motion Picture Masterpiece (above) is online, via a QR code in the book. I'm not experienced enough to judge whether it's much cop as a script; not much happens, but given that it's supposedly a new installment in an MCU-like arc, it seems comparable with that kind of film (one fight scene starts with the description "The sequence will last the better part of a half hour"). What I love about it though is that it was clearly fully imagined before the book was written, because there are multiple points where the book mentions the casting of a role, or how dialog was changed, or sequences filmed, that match the script.
- The Funny Thing About Love by Tom Ellen (2024)
- Predictable but emminently readable and predictably and enjoyably feel-good romance. Finished it in a couple of days.
- Happy Place by Emily Henry (2023)
- A clever structure of alternating then and now chapters gives us both the beginning and end of the relationship - except that, of course, the real end will be a reconciliation. So the chapters showing us the past keep the read from being too depressing, while the chapters about the characters' current reality build the tension. Will they work things out? It builds over longer than I would normally like, but does make the final ending more satisfying. I could quibble about the fairly obvious emotional manipulation going on here - it's a bit like being able to see the machinery behind the illusion - but it didn't stop me enjoying the book and wanting to reach the end (in a good way).
31/08/2025
Reading - August 2025
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