It's easy to forget this book is fiction. It's also refreshing to read a book written like a long interview. This story could have just as easily been told as a narrative, but there's something captivating about the idea of almost the entire thing being told without an author filling in the gaps. It's just straight from the mouths of the members of a 70's rock band. Along with the interjections from the people most connected to them, you get this complete picture of the life of a band, in the most intimate way, since the stories come directly from those involved.
It's such a genuine way to present a highly emotional story. Characters remember the same situations differently, impart their own neurosis onto events and share more emotion than I feel you'd get from another presentation style. It's great.
This book has all the elements you'd expect from a novel talking about rock and roll. There's addiction, infidelity, bad relationships, and serious drug use. There's also these amazing moments of love, passion, and creativity that you almost never feel from the outside when hearing musicians talk about themselves or their process. You see real doubt and fear as these characters come together to form an amazing band and then struggle to keep it all in sync. It's so real.
The surprise for me though, and this isn't really a spoiler, is that although all that is in the book, it's not what it's actually about. Yes, rock and roll is ever-present, along with the dynamic of being in a band and facing fame, but what this book is really about is love. How it comes in all kinds and what it means to keep it alive. It's about one woman who has found a successful formula for love and tries her best to empower other women to get on their path toward it. It's also about women who fail at it. It's about the concept that love is about choices. It's powerful stuff, and I appreciate the variety of women we see in the book and how they're each able to settle into where they're really supposed to be instead of being forced into a pre-set container.
This is a quick read and so unlike what's out there right now. It's enticing and I highly recommend it.
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