
Simon Birch
1998 • Comedy, Drama, Family • PG
Simon Birch and Joe Wenteworth are boys who have a reputation for being oddballs. Joe never knew his father, and his mother, Rebecca, is keeping her lips sealed no matter how much he protests. Simon, meanwhile, is an 11-year-old dwarf whose outsize personality belies his small stature. Indeed, he often assails the local reverend with thorny theological questions and joins Joe on his quest to find his biological father.
Runtime: 1h 54m
Why you should read the novel
If Simon Birch moved you, experience the unforgettable power of the original novel, A Prayer for Owen Meany by John Irving. The book delivers a richer, deeper exploration of friendship, faith, destiny, and memory that a two-hour film simply can’t contain.
Irving’s masterful storytelling blends compassionate humor with piercing insight into American life, from small-town New England to the turbulent Vietnam era. Owen’s singular voice, indelibly rendered on the page, and Johnny Wheelwright’s reflective narration create an immersive, emotionally layered reading experience.
Choose the novel for a fuller journey: complex themes of belief and doubt, intricate plotting, and revelations that reward close reading. For book lovers and fans of literary fiction, the source material offers a profound, page-turning story—available in print, ebook, and audiobook—worth prioritizing over the movie.
Adaptation differences
Scope and tone shift significantly. The film favors a gentle, nostalgic coming-of-age story, while the novel is broader, darker, and more politically and theologically engaged. Irving’s book spans decades with an adult narrator reflecting from the late 1980s; the movie compresses events into a simpler 1960s setting and trims much of the political commentary.
Names and characters were changed by design. Owen Meany becomes Simon Birch, and Johnny Wheelwright becomes Joe Wenteworth. New or reconfigured figures (like Ben Goodrich) replace or merge book counterparts. At John Irving’s request, the film distances itself from a direct adaptation because its tone, structure, and character arcs diverge substantially.
The climactic act of heroism is reimagined. In the novel, Owen’s long-foreshadowed destiny culminates in a meticulously prepared, shocking moment tied to war and national service; in the film, Simon’s defining sacrifice centers on a local tragedy, emphasizing intimate, small-town stakes. This changes the thematic resonance—from geopolitical and moral questions to a more personal, inspirational parable.
Faith, fate, and mystery are softened. The book’s sustained theological inquiry—predestination, doubt, and the nature of miracles—runs deep and sometimes unsettling. The movie retains inspirational elements but reduces religious intensity and ambiguity. Likewise, the novel’s intricate paternity mystery leads to a late, pivotal revelation; the film reshapes and simplifies that subplot to fit its more straightforward emotional arc.
Simon Birch inspired from
A Prayer for Owen Meany
by John Irving












