Thursday, 5 November 2015

Juliet, Naked - obsessive fan vs reclusive rock star

Annie and Duncan have been living together for 15 years in Gooleness, a sleepy seaside town where the most exciting thing to happen was when a dead shark was washed up onto the beach in 1964.  Neither seem happy, but have stuck it out together partly through a mutual interest in music, but mostly through inertia. The object of Duncan's real affection is Tucker Crowe, a rock star who suddenly disappeared from the public eye many years ago after creating a masterpiece of an album. Annie puts up with this obsession because she is a bit of a fan too. One day, a CD is delivered to the house, which contains the raw, bare demo tracks for that album. Annie listens to it first and is not impressed, but Duncan thinks it is THE best thing he has ever heard and writes an incredible review on the fan website. When Annie writes a counter review, completely dissing it, the gulf between them finally cracks open and a major fallout ensues! Annie is wondering how she could have wasted all those years on such a freak as Duncan, when she receives an email in response to her online review ... and the email is from Tucker Crowe himself. They begin to correspond and this leads us into Tucker's life and we start to find out more about why he dropped off the radar and what he's been doing since then. Can this electronic relationship ever become anything more or, as Annie fears, is this all in her mind ... has that 15 years with Duncan affected her own sense of reality? In Juliet, Naked, Nick Hornby brings together a cast of characters who are letting life slip them by for a variety of reasons. Despite their many flaws, the author has written them so that you can feel for each and every one of them and there is also some crackling dialogue between the main protagonists. There is a Seize The Day feel about the book, and there is an urge to grab at those second chances should they come your way. Life goes by so quickly, try not to waste too much of it with the wrong people! This is an easy, quick read - ideal for a holiday or a cold and rainy evening when there's nothing on the telly!

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 256 print pages.
Price I paid: Free, borrowed from library as an ebook.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio download; ebook.

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