Earlier this year, Tim Blake Nelson reprised as role as Samuel Sterns for Captain America: Brave New World. Far from his first go in the superhero world, and now that he’s gotten a good amount of experience under his belt, he made a novel inspired by that tenure.

Simply titled Superhero, the book focuses on Peter Compton, a washed-up actor looking to make a career comeback by starring in the fictional cape movie “Major Machina.” Not long after he’s touched down in Atlanta to begin shooting, things have started to go bad thanks to “tension and egos,” along with Compton’s own on-set behavior making the rounds online. After that, it’s not just the movie that may fall apart, but also his relationship with his longtime producing partner and wife Marci Levy.

The parallels write themselves, which Nelson wasn’t at all shy about. He told the Hollywood Reporter that the book is fairly accurate “about the world I’ve experienced as an actor and filmmaker. […] Everything in this book I’ve either experienced or heard about from somebody who experienced it directly. So I don’t look at this as a wildly exaggerated world that I’m depicting.” He was already writing the book when he’d been approached about coming back for Captain America, and during production, talked with as many people on set as he could—from his fellow actors to Marvel producer Nate Moore and the DP—to “fortify the accuracy” of what he was putting on the page.

© The Unnamed Press

But if you’re thinking Superhero is frequently taking potshots at this part of the moviemaking industry a la The Studio, Nelson stressed that’s not the case. If anything, he thinks it’s more “a love letter to making movies” and “the microcosm of making a tentpole movie as a way of looking more broadly at our culture where it is right now.” In fact, he thinks the genre is still doing fairly well, even if it’s not the consistent money maker it used to be, and hopes readers understand he wrote this with real intent and not just to stroke his own ego.

“I don’t take writing novels lightly, which is why I waited until my 50s to write my first one,” he told THR. “The ambition here is to write a real novel.” Luckily, Superhero is in stores now, so you can find out for yourself how much of a “real novel” it is.

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