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Juliet, Naked (Hardcover)

by Nick Hornby (Author)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (26 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Viking (1 Sep 2009)
  • ISBN-10: 0670915653
  • ISBN-13: 978-0670915651
  • Product Dimensions: 23.4 x 15.8 x 3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (26 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 16,045 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in these categories:

    #5 in  Books > Fiction > Authors, A-Z > H > Hornby, Nick
    #26 in  Books > Fiction > Contemporary Fiction: 1970 Onwards > Lad Lit

Product Description

Review

Juliet, Naked is Hornby’s best novel to date. (Simon Baker, The Spectator 20090913)

Subtle and insightful, and really quite touching. (Laurence Phelan, The Independent on Sunday 20090827)

Ingenious, funny and moving, but also examines loneliness, self obsession and the dangers of communicating solely through a keyboard. (Wendy Holden, Daily Mail 20090904)

Hornby writes so well that you can almost smell the birdseed odour of badly dried clothes combined with failure that pervades Annie’s house; his triumph though is to find infinite amounts of warmth and humour in this seeming world of desolation. (Roger Perkins, Sunday Telegraph magazine )

It’s good to have him back. Nick Hornby’s first adult novel in four years is a comic delight. Hornby’s writing has an easy, fluent tone, as if he is right inside his characters’ heads. (Nick Curtis, Evening Standard )

In Hornby’s fiction, music is never just about music; among contemporary writers, only Jonathan Lethem has his sure sense for the way popular cultural artefacts become entwined, for good or ill, with ordinary relationships; and in particular, how pop songs minister to deep needs while exposing all too many fresh ones. (Bharat Tandon, TLS )

Product Description

Annie and Duncan are a mid-thirties couple who have reached a fork in the road, realising their shared interest in the reclusive musician Tucker Crowe (in Duncan's case, an obsession rather than an interest) is not enough to hold them together any more. When Annie hates Tucker's 'new release', a terrible demo of his most famous album, it's the last straw - Duncan cheats on her and she promptly throws him out. Via an internet discussion forum, Annie's harsh opinion reaches Tucker himself, who couldn't agree more. He and Annie start an unlikely correspondence which teaches them both something about moving on from years of wasted time. Nick Hornby's compelling new novel, four years after A Long Way Down, is about the nature of creativity and obsession, and how two lonely people can gradually find each other. (20090830)

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85% buy the item featured on this page:
Juliet, Naked 3.2 out of 5 stars (26)
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Customer Reviews

26 Reviews
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 (3)
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 (11)
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 (2)
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Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (26 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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38 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Let it Be..., 25 Sep 2009
By Robert Machin (Hampshire, UK) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
I really like Nick Hornby. I think he's an astute commentator and critic, I think he has a great take on the modern condition, and for what it's worth I'm pretty sure he's one of the good guys too.

Sadly, I've come to the conclusion that, notwithstanding the decent fist he made of `High Fidelity' (not exactly a great novel, but a damned good read all the same) and most particularly 'About a Boy' (his best fiction to date, and, my guess is, the best he will ever write) he's actually not much of a novelist. Having ploughed my way through `How to be Good' (which worked well in parts and was at least philosophically intriguing), `A Long Way Down', which was just plain awful, and now this, I'm thinking that maybe it's time to give it up and stick to what he's good at - writing funny and perceptive stuff about music, the arts and modern life (which he does better than just about anyone I know). I mean, really - go read `A Long Way Down' and then read `31 Songs' or `The Complete Polysyllabic Spree' and tell me I'm not right.

So here's what I think about `Juliet, Naked `: it's not a bad book and if you picked it up before a flight (assuming the horrible chick-lit-style cover didn`t put you off) it would probably distract you adequately for a few hours. It`s not especially funny, or sad, or emotional, or exciting or really especially anything but it moves along at an adequate pace from page to page, eventually reaching a not especially satisfying conclusion. And, you know, it's only 245 pages, so it's not like a great investment is required from the reader.

It's about music, which Nick knows a lot about - specifically, about Tucker Crowe, former musician and newest addition to Hornby's lengthening gallery of feckless wasters - and the nature of art, creativity and fandom. It addresses unsatisfactory, dysfunctional modern family relationships too, about which perhaps he knows a bit. Quite a lot of it (though not nearly enough, in my opinion) concerns how the internet has changed the way we engage with the world. So far so promising - these are interesting themes - but as a novel it just don't work. The main stories - Tucker vegetating in the US, Annie and Duncan likewise in Gooleness - are kind of flat and dispiriting, the way they're entwined is unconvincing, the characters don't really get off the page more than once or twice, the dialogue is all a bit heightened and artificial, in the end, the multiple threads are tied up and dispatched with indecent haste... you know, in the end it's just not that good (a horrible thought crosses my mind at this point - Dickens is mentioned more than once or twice, for no apparent reason - is it all meant to be Dickensian in style? I really hope not).

It's more than this though. All through 'Juliet, Naked', I couldn't shake my sense of Nick Hornby making it all up. Only a few fleeting pages managed to suspend my disbelief and banish the picture in my mind of the author at his desk, chewing his pencil. I know how stupid that sounds - I know a novel is, by definition, invented - but a good novelist, and a good novel, will quickly let you forget that.

I tried to figure out why this was so, and I in the end I think it's to do with the voice which dominates this book as it does so many other Hornby novels. `Juliet, Naked' has a wide range of characters - too wide, maybe - and his dialogue isn`t so bad, but a great deal of the book is taken up with the internalized thoughts of the characters, and here's the thing - they all think in exactly the same way and in exactly the same voice, and I'm guessing that they all think exactly like Nick Hornby, in that elliptical, analytical, self-effacing and in the end more than mildly irritating way. So what I end up thinking is "you've clearly got interesting things to say in these areas, Nick - why do you feel you need to wrap them up in this stupid story?

Nick Hornby has legions of fans and I'll probably get flamed to death for this review, but to reiterate - I like the guy, his ideas and his writing - I just don't think the novel is the right vehicle for any of them. Maybe it's time to let the form go, and focus on crit.
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16 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Regrets, I've Had a Few..., 14 Oct 2009
By A. Ross (Washington, DC) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Obviously there's deep irony in posting a review of a new book by one of my favorite authors when one of the key elements of the book's plot is an adoring fan's online review of a new album...but oh well. I have to admit, I was a little leery when I cracked the spine of Hornby's latest novel. After setting the bar ridiculously high with his first two books, Fever Pitch and High Fidelity, Hornby has continued on to produce a series of engaging, but not quite as brilliant successors. And it had to be said that his last adult novel, A Long Way Down, was distinctly underwhelming. Fortunately, this new book represents a return to form, as well as being a work that speaks to an older (though probably not wiser) audience than his previous work.

The mechanics of the story are relatively simple: Annie and Duncan are a cohabitating couple approaching 40 as they eke out moderate existences as a small museum director and college instructor, respectively. They've been together for 15 years, and about the only thing keeping them together is inertia and the lack of prospects in the seaside cultural wasteland they live in (a fictional town on England's eastern coast, somewhere near Hull -- roughly the American equivalent of a small, tacky, Jersey shore town). Duncan is obsessed with an obscure American singer-songwriter from the '80s who inexplicably walked away from music one day, and spends a great deal of his time and energy running a website devoted to the mysterious Tucker Crowe. One day, a "new" Tucker Crowe album is released (it's actually the demos from a concept album beloved by his fans), and Duncan and Annie's differing reactions to it trigger a chain of events which brings the reclusive ex-musician into their lives in the flesh.

Here, we have three main characters who are middle-aged (as Hornby himself is) in a story whose dominant theme is mortality and regret. The book revolves around the question of what to do when you suspect you might have wasted a good portion of your life. Yes, it's all about the good old-fashioned mid-life crisis, only here, the characters don't have any particular attachments that will prevent them from repositioning themselves. If this doesn't sound promising, don't worry, it's engaging, funny, and refuses to submit to expectations. As in all his books, Hornby is honest enough to make his characters face the consequences of their poor decisions, while remaining a compassionate enough writer to make them real, multidimensional people.

Another of the main themes is parenthood, and I wonder whether I would have connected to this book as much ten years ago, before I had children of my own. Hornby --himself a father of three -- seems to be suggesting that while conventional redemption is not simple to come by, a more complex kind may be achieved through parenthood. It'll be interesting to see if there's a generation gap in reactions to the book. All that said, there's still plenty of pop culture geekery to revel in. For example, one minor subplot involves Annie stumbling into a Northern Soul night at a local club, allowing Hornby to write about that odd little British subculture (see books like Nightshift, Northern Soul, and Too Darn Soulful). And as I mentioned before, it's quite funny -- full of sharp wit and laugh-out-loud lines which help to even out the tone. A good, quick read for people of a certain age.
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14 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars New Hornby - High Fidelity fans won't be disappointed, 5 Sep 2009
By R. MCINTYRE "Rory Wong" (Scotland) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Juliet,Naked,the new book from Nick Hornby could be seen as a companion piece to High Fidelity.If you like that,I think you'll like this.

The title refers to a stripped down version of an album(much like the Beatles-Let It Be,Naked) called Juliet by the fictitious and reclusive Tucker Crow.The main characters Duncan and Annie have been in a relationship for more then fifteen years and although Annie is a fan of Tucker Crow's,Duncan is an obsessive.The book starts with the couple on a tour of famous sites the singer has played and visited over the years,including a public toilet where he allegedly decided to give it all up.When a stripped down version of Tucker's masterpiece Juliet arrives through the mail,Annie listens to it first,which enrages Duncan on his return home.I don't really want to give away any more than that in terms of story.

The plot deals mostly with how music fans and obsessives can read a bit too much into songs and lyrics,which in turn can have a negative effect on a relationship.It's funny and honest and although I could see some things coming,not all reveals were done in the way I thought they would be.

The characters were well written and on recently reading 31 Songs by Hornby,I can see a lot of references to some of his own musical heroes in here such as Bruce Springsteen and Dylan.With their own famous break-up albums Tunnel of Love and Blood on the tracks mentioned,it made me wonder if Nick Hornby has the music for Juliet in his head,quoting several of the songs lyrics throughout.This fictitious piece of work seems to be something you wonder if Hornby has fantasized about for many years being such a huge music fan as he is,and not being a songwriter as such,this is his means to get his own album out there.

The book deals mostly with family and responsibilities.For fans of High Fidelity there are plenty of similarities in terms of how music fans can go too far with how much a favourite album can mean,even to the detriment of a marriage or friendship.

I hope this helps anyone who's interested in reading this book.


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Most Recent Customer Reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars Tired
Found this all a bit tired I'm afraid. Nick Hornby tries to provide a thoughtful commentary on modern life (which he does well with the exploration of those that frequent internet... Read more
Published 12 hours ago by S. Howard

2.0 out of 5 stars boring
I bought it in hardback looking forward to a funny uplifting read (based on Hornby's previous books.) I found it completely boring. Read more
Published 1 day ago by Maureen Tucker

4.0 out of 5 stars Juliet, Clothed
Nick Hornby's latest novel in my esteemed opinion is a return to form after the fiasco of 'A Long Way Down' which I couldn't even penetrate the first few chapters. Read more
Published 7 days ago by TheGerbilTamer

2.0 out of 5 stars Quite disappointing
'Juliet Naked' is a terrible novel principally because it is EXTREMELY BORING. It is a vapid and soporific novel. Read more
Published 7 days ago by L. Cameron

3.0 out of 5 stars So-so
Juliet, Naked is about three people: Annie and Duncan have been in a relationship for 15 years and who have long since grown apart. Read more
Published 8 days ago by Julia Flyte

2.0 out of 5 stars No High Fidelity
I was excited to pick this up in paperback, and while I read it in a day, I didn't enjoy it nearly as much as other Hornby books. Read more
Published 10 days ago by Cat

5.0 out of 5 stars Back to form
I was disappointed with How to be Good and A Long Way Down but with this one he returns to his earlier excellent form. Read more
Published 18 days ago by Helen E. Horseman

4.0 out of 5 stars hornby's best since High Fidelity
funny, heart-warming, poignant. believable characters without being cliched.

a far more positive feel than his last three, darker novels
Published 21 days ago by ajay313

3.0 out of 5 stars Another book for the American market
Nick Hornby tells it like it is for the modern world. His representative unmarried couple Duncan and Annie live in Middle England. Read more
Published 22 days ago by Mr. T. A. Pitman

2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing
I am a fan of Hornby. The last thing of his I read was a fantastic novella entitled 'Not a Star,' a book which even though it only took about twenty minutes to read, had me... Read more
Published 2 months ago by Mrs. K. A. Wheatley

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