Juliet, naked
Material type:
- 9781410423993
- F/HOR
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Colombo Fiction | F/HOR |
Available
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Large Print | CA00005120 |
Total holds: 0
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
In a dreary seaside town in England, Annie loves Duncan -- or thinks she does, because she always has. Duncan loves Annie, but then, all of a sudden, he doesn't anymore. So Annie stops loving Duncan, and starts getting her own life. She sparks an e-mail correspondence with Tucker Crowe, a reclusive Dylanesque singer-songwriter who stopped making music years ago and who is also Duncan's greatest obsession. A surprising connection is forged . . .
13.49 GBP
Excerpt provided by Syndetics
Reviews provided by Syndetics
Library Journal Review
Hornby's (www.nicksbooks.com) sixth novel, following Slam (2007), centers on Tucker Crowe, a reclusive musician about to release his first album in 22 years; Duncan, Tucker's No. 1 fan; and Duncan's girlfriend, whose uncomplimentary review of the album incites a reaction from Tucker himself. The characters are all wonderfully drawn by Hornby; he is especially skilled at revealing the thought processes of the men, who seem so easily to become entangled and obsessed. Bill Irwin, Ben Miles, and Jennifer Wiltsie do an excellent job of narrating, keeping the characters straight and the story moving along for listeners. Fans of Woody Allen's early movies will love this novel, with its wordy, neurotic, and comic turns; for medium and large public libraries. ["Fans of...High Fidelity will be excited to learn of Hornby's return to a pop culture-infused story about mucked-up modern romance," read the review of the Riverhead hc, LJ 8/09.-Ed.]-Barbara Valle, El Paso P.L., TX (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Publishers Weekly Review
Hornby returns to his roots--music, manic fandom, messy romance--in his funny and touching latest, dancing between three perspectives on fame: a sycophantic scholar, an appreciative audience member, a fabled singer-songwriter who can't see what all the fuss is about. After cult musician Tucker Crowe vanished from the public eye 20 years ago, his small but devoted fan base built up a mythology around his oeuvre and the people and places associated with his storied life. Self-appointed "Crowologist" Duncan has indoctrinated his girlfriend, Annie, on the wonders of Tucker, but when Annie fails to recognize the genius of a newly released version of Crowe's classic album Juliet, their 15-year relationship quickly crumbles. Meanwhile, Duncan's glowing first review is increasingly debated, while Annie's deconstructive essay posted on the same Web site earns her a clandestine e-mail correspondence with the reclusive musician. Soon, their exchanges grow more personal; given that Tucker lives in an American backwater and Annie resides in a remote English town, both view their e-mails as a safe flirtation until the dissolution of Tucker's latest marriage and a crisis with one of his several neglected children brings him to Annie's side of the Atlantic. Through brisk dialogue and quick scene changes, Hornby highlights each character's misconceptions about his or her own life, and though Duncan, Annie and Tucker are consistently ridiculous and often self-destructive, they are portrayed with an extraordinary degree of sympathy. Tucker's status of Dylan by way of Salinger allows for an intriguing critique of celebrity fetishization and of the motives behind the eccentricity that comes along with fame. Obviously, this is a must-read for Hornby's fans, but it also works as a surprisingly thoughtful complement to the piles of musician bios and memoirs. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reservedBooklist Review
*Starred Review* Hornby's characters may be marinated in melancholy, but there's always a ray or two of hope. He brings together a compelling, original cast in this sweet and sorrowful tale of rock 'n' roll and love on the rocks. Tucker Crowe is a has-been American musician, destined to fade into obscurity save for a handful of devoted listeners. Scholar Duncan Thomson is one of the loyal (a Croweologist, as it were). Duncan's dedication to his musical hero far exceeds his interest in his significant other, Annie, who wonders whether the 15 years she's spent with Duncan in a bleak English seaside town have been the biggest mistake of her life. The release of an acoustic version of Crowe's best-known album, Juliet, sparks an e-mail correspondence between Tucker and Annie, and the two strangers revel in a candor each is able to exercise for the first time in their lives. Annie starts to see her relationship with Duncan for the dead-end that it is; Tucker begins to acknowledge his failures both as a musician and father (he has children from several different women, mostly models, wouldn't you know?). Englishman Hornby, whose many best-selling and award-winning books include A Long Way Down (2005), is a master at rendering romantic relationships, particularly those that seem broken beyond repair. Fans of High Fidelity (1995), perhaps Hornby's most popular book, will enjoy this related take on the lives of the musically obsessed. A wise, witty, and bittersweet novel.--Block, Allison Copyright 2009 BooklistKirkus Book Review
British woman finds herself in an intimate e-mail relationship with the obscure '80s rock star her music-obsessed ex idolizes. Annie can understand liking American singer-songwriter Tucker Crowe. After all, his masterful breakup album, Juliet, is one of her favorites. The problem is that her longtime live-in boyfriend Duncan (an older, sadder version of Rob in Hornby's High Fidelity, 1995) lives and breathes Tucker Crowe, to the exclusion of having an actual grown-up life. After 15 years, Annie realizes she has wasted her childbearing prime tied to a man who feels more passion for a reclusive musician than he could ever muster for her. Duncan then makes it easy for Annie to kick him out by cheating on her with Gina, a new performing-arts instructor at the school where he teaches. In the meantime, Annie has inadvertently begun a web correspondence with Tucker himself, who finds her through an astute post she leaves on one of Duncan's geeky fan sites. The years have not been kind to Tucker, who lives in suburban Pennsylvania with his young son. His life bears little resemblance to the legend that has grown up around his disappearance more than 20 years earlier. Their meaningful exchanges awaken feelings in Annie that she had nearly given up on, while also giving her a vicarious thrill over one-upping Duncan. Tucker likes her too, finding her wit and kindness refreshing after years of chasing models. Living in a sleepy English seaside town, Annie has little hope of actually meeting her correspondent, but when a family drama brings Tucker to London, she sees an opportunity for adventureand more. Tucker arrives, personal baggage in tow, and what happens next transforms both their lives in ways they could not have anticipated. Few can match the muted humor, lingering poignancy and depth with which Hornby (A Long Way Down, 2005, etc.) limns his forgivably human characters. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.There are no comments on this title.
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