Art Edwards's Blog, page 13
October 14, 2013
A New Screening of Stuck Outside of Phoenix the Movie in Tempe for Halloween!!!
Yes, Phoenicians, Stuck Outside of Phoenix the Movie is again coming to a theater near you, and for All Hollow's Eve no less.
Producer Nico is a big time Halloween freak, and he's concocted a night of Rock and Scare Mayhem for Saturday, Oct. 26th. Details aren't 1000% firm but here's what we know for sure: The movie will show at a Tempe theater starting at 9:30 PM on Saturday. Your Stuck ticket will be good for both the movie and entrance into Sail Inn later that night, which will feature local music and a distinctly haunted vibe. Sounds like a ghoulishly good time? You better believe it.
So go see Stuck, and get the pants scared off of you!
Yours in laying down the law,
Art
Check out the Trailer for Stuck Outside of Phoenix the Movie, which premiered in May 2013.
Or try Stuck Outside of Phoenix in print form for just $10.
Or try Stuck for your Kindle for just $2.99.
Producer Nico is a big time Halloween freak, and he's concocted a night of Rock and Scare Mayhem for Saturday, Oct. 26th. Details aren't 1000% firm but here's what we know for sure: The movie will show at a Tempe theater starting at 9:30 PM on Saturday. Your Stuck ticket will be good for both the movie and entrance into Sail Inn later that night, which will feature local music and a distinctly haunted vibe. Sounds like a ghoulishly good time? You better believe it.
So go see Stuck, and get the pants scared off of you!
Yours in laying down the law,
Art
Check out the Trailer for Stuck Outside of Phoenix the Movie, which premiered in May 2013.

Or try Stuck Outside of Phoenix in print form for just $10.

Or try Stuck for your Kindle for just $2.99.
Published on October 14, 2013 15:30
October 7, 2013
I'm Teaching a One-Day Self-Publishing Seminar at The Attic in November!!!
Hey, current and future self-pubbers!
I have a self-publishing seminar going down in November at The Attic. The difference from my summer course? It all happens in one day. That's right. In eight hours on a Sunday, you will go from someone with a manuscript, a lot of questions, and a will to do it all yourself to someone armed and ready for the fun if murky waters of self-publication. Sound good? Come hang with me on a Sunday! It'll be fun!
Click for more details.
Yours in laying down the law,
Art
Check out the Trailer for Stuck Outside of Phoenix the Movie, which premiered in May 2013.
Or try Stuck Outside of Phoenix in print form for just $10.
Or try Stuck for your Kindle for just $2.99.
I have a self-publishing seminar going down in November at The Attic. The difference from my summer course? It all happens in one day. That's right. In eight hours on a Sunday, you will go from someone with a manuscript, a lot of questions, and a will to do it all yourself to someone armed and ready for the fun if murky waters of self-publication. Sound good? Come hang with me on a Sunday! It'll be fun!
Click for more details.
Yours in laying down the law,
Art
Check out the Trailer for Stuck Outside of Phoenix the Movie, which premiered in May 2013.

Or try Stuck Outside of Phoenix in print form for just $10.

Or try Stuck for your Kindle for just $2.99.
Published on October 07, 2013 15:43
September 30, 2013
Quick Update on Badge
I'm in the process of putting Badge into book form. When I thought of getting a traditional publisher for the novel, this is the part I most looked forward to handing off to them.
Still, it's going well enough, and I hope to send Badge to the printer on Monday 10/14, two weeks from today. I'll be glad when it's done and I can start focusing on some of the promotional aspects of its launch, which at this moment is slated for 2/18/14. People who donated to Badge's Kickstarter campaign will get their copies in January.
Okay, back to it.
Yours in laying down the law,
Art
Check out the Trailer for Stuck Outside of Phoenix the Movie, which premiered in May 2013.
Or try Stuck Outside of Phoenix in print form for just $10.
Or try Stuck for your Kindle for just $2.99.
Still, it's going well enough, and I hope to send Badge to the printer on Monday 10/14, two weeks from today. I'll be glad when it's done and I can start focusing on some of the promotional aspects of its launch, which at this moment is slated for 2/18/14. People who donated to Badge's Kickstarter campaign will get their copies in January.
Okay, back to it.
Yours in laying down the law,
Art
Check out the Trailer for Stuck Outside of Phoenix the Movie, which premiered in May 2013.

Or try Stuck Outside of Phoenix in print form for just $10.

Or try Stuck for your Kindle for just $2.99.
Published on September 30, 2013 15:22
September 23, 2013
Put your Lobotomy Cap on Before Reading This One
I could write an essay showing the myriad atrocities in this Daily Beast article, but I won't have time. I will say it's entirely possible The Daily Beast does not have your best interests at heart.
Yours in laying down the law,
Art
Check out the Trailer for Stuck Outside of Phoenix the Movie, which premiered in May 2013.
Or try Stuck Outside of Phoenix in print form for just $10.
Or try Stuck for your Kindle for just $2.99.
Yours in laying down the law,
Art
Check out the Trailer for Stuck Outside of Phoenix the Movie, which premiered in May 2013.

Or try Stuck Outside of Phoenix in print form for just $10.

Or try Stuck for your Kindle for just $2.99.
Published on September 23, 2013 15:25
September 16, 2013
My Latest at the Weeklings
Never afraid to grapple with the hard questions of our day, this week at The Weeklings I take on your reluctance to give in to the corporate rock of your youth. Come on people, it's only rock and roll (and you love it).
Yours in laying down the law,
Art
Check out the Trailer for Stuck Outside of Phoenix the Movie, which premiered in May 2013.
Or try Stuck Outside of Phoenix in print form for just $10.
Or try Stuck for your Kindle for just $2.99.
Yours in laying down the law,
Art
Check out the Trailer for Stuck Outside of Phoenix the Movie, which premiered in May 2013.

Or try Stuck Outside of Phoenix in print form for just $10.

Or try Stuck for your Kindle for just $2.99.
Published on September 16, 2013 13:28
September 14, 2013
Top Twenty Rock Novels of All Time: Complete List
Top 20 Rock Novels of All Time
20 Ten Thousand Saints By Eleanor Henderson
19 Never Mind Nirvana by Mark Lindquist
18 Twisted Kicks by Tom Carson
17 Boarded Windows by Dylan Hicks
16 The Cost of Living by Rob Roberge
15 The Last Rock Star Book, Or: Liz Phair, a Rant by Camden Joy
14 You Don’t Love Me Yet by Jonathan Lethem
13 A & R by Bill Flanagan
12 Saguaro: The Life & Adventures of Bobby Allen Bird by Carson Mell
11 Wise Young Fool by Sean Beaudoin
10 A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan
9 Great Jones Street by Don DeLillo
8 How the Mistakes Were Made by Tyler McMahon
7 The Blue Bourbon Orchestra by Carson Mell
6 The Wishbones by Tom Perrotta
5 Never Mind the Pollacks by Neal Pollack
4 Stone Arabia by Dana Spiotta
3 High Fidelity by Nick Hornby
2 The Commitments by Roddy Doyle
1 Banned for Life by D. R. Haney
Start at the beginning here.
Yours in laying down the law,
Art
Check out the Trailer for Stuck Outside of Phoenix the Movie, which premiered in May 2013.
Or try Stuck Outside of Phoenix in print form for just $10.
Or try Stuck for your Kindle for just $2.99.
20 Ten Thousand Saints By Eleanor Henderson
19 Never Mind Nirvana by Mark Lindquist
18 Twisted Kicks by Tom Carson
17 Boarded Windows by Dylan Hicks
16 The Cost of Living by Rob Roberge
15 The Last Rock Star Book, Or: Liz Phair, a Rant by Camden Joy
14 You Don’t Love Me Yet by Jonathan Lethem
13 A & R by Bill Flanagan
12 Saguaro: The Life & Adventures of Bobby Allen Bird by Carson Mell
11 Wise Young Fool by Sean Beaudoin
10 A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan
9 Great Jones Street by Don DeLillo
8 How the Mistakes Were Made by Tyler McMahon
7 The Blue Bourbon Orchestra by Carson Mell
6 The Wishbones by Tom Perrotta
5 Never Mind the Pollacks by Neal Pollack
4 Stone Arabia by Dana Spiotta
3 High Fidelity by Nick Hornby
2 The Commitments by Roddy Doyle
1 Banned for Life by D. R. Haney
Start at the beginning here.
Yours in laying down the law,
Art
Check out the Trailer for Stuck Outside of Phoenix the Movie, which premiered in May 2013.

Or try Stuck Outside of Phoenix in print form for just $10.

Or try Stuck for your Kindle for just $2.99.
Published on September 14, 2013 08:05
September 13, 2013
Top Twenty Rock Novels of All Time : #1
What's this? Start at the beginning here.
1
Banned for Life by D. R. Haney
I first came across Banned for Life in 2010 after having a piece published at The Nervous Breakdown and becoming involved in its literary community. One of the most colorful writer/commenters at TNB was D. R. “Duke” Haney. Haney’s debut novel, I read in his bio, was called Banned for Life, which upon further review had serious rock lit overtones, putting it right up my alley. But the thing was $21, well more than what I wanted to pay for a paperback. So, I did what any good supporter of the arts does: I tried to find it used.
When that didn’t work, I tried to hit Haney up for a free copy in a trade for my latest, Ghost Notes. Haney, on to my scheme from the onset, said he’d love to trade but didn’t have a copy of his novel to give away. I waited a year, periodically scanning the Internet, looking for a way to get Banned for Life for less than 20 bucks, to no avail. It was clear if I were going to read this thing, I’d have to suck it up and become that rarest of all creatures: a genuine supporter of small press literature. I placed my order at Powell’s, coughed up the dough, and once I had it in my hands, I plopped onto my couch.
And didn’t get up for a long time.
Banned for Life is more than just another worthy contribution to the pantheon of rock novels. It’s the best one I’ve ever read.
Jason “Killer” Maddox is Banned for Life’s narrator, and his voice is central to the appeal of the novel. It’s also a voice I associate with Haney himself, having read much of his work at The Nervous Breakdown. Instances of its power and compelling nature abound, but the first few sentences capture it as well as any: “It all began with a fuck. What doesn’t? I fucked the wrong person; I fucked up the right one; somebody played me a song. It changed my whole life, that song. That’s why I later went to so much trouble to find the guy who wrote and sang it.”
And there you have the through-story of Banned for Life, but more importantly you have the tenor of the teller: passionate, provocative, profane. It’s the kind of voice I’m inclined to listen to.
But Haney doesn’t just rely on the stun of his yawp. Throughout the novel he reveals his talent for tropes, like this passage about his best friend Peewee: “At fifteen he’d soaked up more knowledge than most people twice and three times his age, and he’d ramble through it in breathless monologues, veering from subject to subject like a house-trapped sparrow trying to find an open window.”
Or in this description of Los Angeles: “At times it reminded me of a Doors song: laid-back on the one hand, ghostly on the other—a hammock stretched between tombstones.”
Or when he first meets Peewee: “There was a sense of stumbling on a secret somehow, as if I’d tripped on a rug and discovered a cellar that wasn’t in the floor plan.”
Haney is a writer, not a blogger, and anyone who picks up Banned for Life with hopes of finding something more elevated than the latest Internet click bait won’t be disappointed.
Jason and Peewee’s relationship is front and center for much of the novel, but just as compelling to me is Jason’s girlfriend Irina, a beautiful, married, chronically detached Serbian who over the course of the last half of the novel learns the underside of what her beauty gets her. Their mutual friend Milan tries to clue Jason in:
“You know Irina—I love her very much, but she plays her game with me, you know. She does this for a long time with me, but then I realize nothing will happen.”
Despite the warning, Jason falls hard for Irina, so much so he doesn’t like her passing affection for anyone, even his long-gone friend Peewee. “Here was a girl so astonishing in every way, I was always going to feel jealous, even of someone who’d been dead for years.”
Much passes between the two lovebirds, most of it maddening for Jason. Not since Jake Barnes and Lady Brett Ashley does a literary relationship seem so doomed for the outset.
If anything in Banned for Life made me bump, it was the occasional gesture of Jason to his own comeliness, or strength, or sexual prowess. For example: “There’s no other way to say it: I was a big, tall, handsome guy.” And later with Irina: “‘I think I’m going to leave,’ she said, and started to get up, but I pulled her down and fucked her nearly comatose, and she was nothing if not encouraging.” That great voice loses a bit for me in these instances. When Jason reflects, “I’m not trying to suggest my dick is that big, or I’m that great in bed,” we know he’s suggesting just that.
But these quibbles can't ebb the flow of goodwill I feel for Banned for Life. Haney has created a tale both tender and bombastic--not unlike your favorite rock album--and the book fulfills the promise of the rock novel better than any other to date.
And you better believe it’s worth $21.
Yours in laying down the law,
Art
Check out the Trailer for Stuck Outside of Phoenix the Movie, which premiered in May 2013.
Or try Stuck Outside of Phoenix in print form for just $10.
Or try Stuck for your Kindle for just $2.99.
1
Banned for Life by D. R. Haney
I first came across Banned for Life in 2010 after having a piece published at The Nervous Breakdown and becoming involved in its literary community. One of the most colorful writer/commenters at TNB was D. R. “Duke” Haney. Haney’s debut novel, I read in his bio, was called Banned for Life, which upon further review had serious rock lit overtones, putting it right up my alley. But the thing was $21, well more than what I wanted to pay for a paperback. So, I did what any good supporter of the arts does: I tried to find it used.
When that didn’t work, I tried to hit Haney up for a free copy in a trade for my latest, Ghost Notes. Haney, on to my scheme from the onset, said he’d love to trade but didn’t have a copy of his novel to give away. I waited a year, periodically scanning the Internet, looking for a way to get Banned for Life for less than 20 bucks, to no avail. It was clear if I were going to read this thing, I’d have to suck it up and become that rarest of all creatures: a genuine supporter of small press literature. I placed my order at Powell’s, coughed up the dough, and once I had it in my hands, I plopped onto my couch.
And didn’t get up for a long time.
Banned for Life is more than just another worthy contribution to the pantheon of rock novels. It’s the best one I’ve ever read.
Jason “Killer” Maddox is Banned for Life’s narrator, and his voice is central to the appeal of the novel. It’s also a voice I associate with Haney himself, having read much of his work at The Nervous Breakdown. Instances of its power and compelling nature abound, but the first few sentences capture it as well as any: “It all began with a fuck. What doesn’t? I fucked the wrong person; I fucked up the right one; somebody played me a song. It changed my whole life, that song. That’s why I later went to so much trouble to find the guy who wrote and sang it.”
And there you have the through-story of Banned for Life, but more importantly you have the tenor of the teller: passionate, provocative, profane. It’s the kind of voice I’m inclined to listen to.
But Haney doesn’t just rely on the stun of his yawp. Throughout the novel he reveals his talent for tropes, like this passage about his best friend Peewee: “At fifteen he’d soaked up more knowledge than most people twice and three times his age, and he’d ramble through it in breathless monologues, veering from subject to subject like a house-trapped sparrow trying to find an open window.”
Or in this description of Los Angeles: “At times it reminded me of a Doors song: laid-back on the one hand, ghostly on the other—a hammock stretched between tombstones.”
Or when he first meets Peewee: “There was a sense of stumbling on a secret somehow, as if I’d tripped on a rug and discovered a cellar that wasn’t in the floor plan.”
Haney is a writer, not a blogger, and anyone who picks up Banned for Life with hopes of finding something more elevated than the latest Internet click bait won’t be disappointed.
Jason and Peewee’s relationship is front and center for much of the novel, but just as compelling to me is Jason’s girlfriend Irina, a beautiful, married, chronically detached Serbian who over the course of the last half of the novel learns the underside of what her beauty gets her. Their mutual friend Milan tries to clue Jason in:
“You know Irina—I love her very much, but she plays her game with me, you know. She does this for a long time with me, but then I realize nothing will happen.”
Despite the warning, Jason falls hard for Irina, so much so he doesn’t like her passing affection for anyone, even his long-gone friend Peewee. “Here was a girl so astonishing in every way, I was always going to feel jealous, even of someone who’d been dead for years.”
Much passes between the two lovebirds, most of it maddening for Jason. Not since Jake Barnes and Lady Brett Ashley does a literary relationship seem so doomed for the outset.
If anything in Banned for Life made me bump, it was the occasional gesture of Jason to his own comeliness, or strength, or sexual prowess. For example: “There’s no other way to say it: I was a big, tall, handsome guy.” And later with Irina: “‘I think I’m going to leave,’ she said, and started to get up, but I pulled her down and fucked her nearly comatose, and she was nothing if not encouraging.” That great voice loses a bit for me in these instances. When Jason reflects, “I’m not trying to suggest my dick is that big, or I’m that great in bed,” we know he’s suggesting just that.
But these quibbles can't ebb the flow of goodwill I feel for Banned for Life. Haney has created a tale both tender and bombastic--not unlike your favorite rock album--and the book fulfills the promise of the rock novel better than any other to date.
And you better believe it’s worth $21.
Yours in laying down the law,
Art
Check out the Trailer for Stuck Outside of Phoenix the Movie, which premiered in May 2013.

Or try Stuck Outside of Phoenix in print form for just $10.

Or try Stuck for your Kindle for just $2.99.
Published on September 13, 2013 09:01
September 12, 2013
Top Twenty Rock Novels of All Time: #5-2
What's this? Start at the beginning here.
5
Never Mind the Pollacks by Neal Pollack
The most brazen book on this list, Pollack plants his fictional doppelganger, rock critic Neal Pollack, at the scene of every important rock event in the latter half of the 20th Century, taking us from its birth with Sam Phillips in Memphis all the way to the fateful day Kurt and Courtney got married. Elvis, Iggy and Patti Smith all make appearances, but none of them are an compelling as Pollack, who rages against the dying of the rock.
Memorable Line: “They listened to Jimmie Rodgers and Fats Domino all across Texas, Elvis blowing flies off his lips, Scotty and Bill becoming progressively less famous, Neal chugging the cough syrup, staring bug-eyed out the window, singing ‘Baby, Let’s Play House’ as they steamed into New Orleans and Jacksonville and all roads leading to stardom.”
4
Stone Arabia by Dana Spiotta
Stone Arabia is story of one reclusive rock musician—Rik, who over the course of several decades has created The Chronicles, a mish-mash of music, journalism and ephemera encompassing his made-up rock star life—told from the point of view of his younger sister Denise, who’s struggling to get down her own chronicles. Spiotta beautifully renders a rock life as it gets old, and wears thin.
Memorable Line: “She was a woman who always appeared past her peak but who actually never had a peak.”
3
High Fidelity by Nick Hornby
Record store owner and music freak Rob is obsessed with understanding his life through top-five lists, all while his ex-girlfriend sleeps with his upstairs neighbor. Hornby gives us an archetypal rock character, the sullen guy a little too attached to his own pop culture opinions while real life threatens to pass him by.
Memorable Line: “Tuesday night I reorganize my record collection; I often do this at periods of emotional stress.”
2
The Commitments by Roddy Doyle
The Commitments is a charming story of a batch of south Dublin nobodies who manage to put together a blues act that threatens to take them to the top. No novel has ever brought the vibe of rock so convincingly to the page, or the fragility of an pop act on a quick ascension to stardom.
Memorable Line: “You made up for the lack of variety by thumping the string more often and taking your hand off the neck and putting it back a lot to make it look like you were involved in complicated work.”
Check in Friday for the #1 Greatest Rock Novel of All Time.
Yours in laying down the law,
Art
Check out the Trailer for Stuck Outside of Phoenix the Movie, which premiered in May 2013.
Or try Stuck Outside of Phoenix in print form for just $10.
Or try Stuck for your Kindle for just $2.99.
5
Never Mind the Pollacks by Neal Pollack
The most brazen book on this list, Pollack plants his fictional doppelganger, rock critic Neal Pollack, at the scene of every important rock event in the latter half of the 20th Century, taking us from its birth with Sam Phillips in Memphis all the way to the fateful day Kurt and Courtney got married. Elvis, Iggy and Patti Smith all make appearances, but none of them are an compelling as Pollack, who rages against the dying of the rock.
Memorable Line: “They listened to Jimmie Rodgers and Fats Domino all across Texas, Elvis blowing flies off his lips, Scotty and Bill becoming progressively less famous, Neal chugging the cough syrup, staring bug-eyed out the window, singing ‘Baby, Let’s Play House’ as they steamed into New Orleans and Jacksonville and all roads leading to stardom.”
4
Stone Arabia by Dana Spiotta
Stone Arabia is story of one reclusive rock musician—Rik, who over the course of several decades has created The Chronicles, a mish-mash of music, journalism and ephemera encompassing his made-up rock star life—told from the point of view of his younger sister Denise, who’s struggling to get down her own chronicles. Spiotta beautifully renders a rock life as it gets old, and wears thin.
Memorable Line: “She was a woman who always appeared past her peak but who actually never had a peak.”
3
High Fidelity by Nick Hornby
Record store owner and music freak Rob is obsessed with understanding his life through top-five lists, all while his ex-girlfriend sleeps with his upstairs neighbor. Hornby gives us an archetypal rock character, the sullen guy a little too attached to his own pop culture opinions while real life threatens to pass him by.
Memorable Line: “Tuesday night I reorganize my record collection; I often do this at periods of emotional stress.”
2
The Commitments by Roddy Doyle
The Commitments is a charming story of a batch of south Dublin nobodies who manage to put together a blues act that threatens to take them to the top. No novel has ever brought the vibe of rock so convincingly to the page, or the fragility of an pop act on a quick ascension to stardom.
Memorable Line: “You made up for the lack of variety by thumping the string more often and taking your hand off the neck and putting it back a lot to make it look like you were involved in complicated work.”
Check in Friday for the #1 Greatest Rock Novel of All Time.
Yours in laying down the law,
Art
Check out the Trailer for Stuck Outside of Phoenix the Movie, which premiered in May 2013.

Or try Stuck Outside of Phoenix in print form for just $10.

Or try Stuck for your Kindle for just $2.99.
Published on September 12, 2013 08:10
September 11, 2013
Top Twenty Rock Novels of All Time: #10-6
What's this? Start at the beginning here.
10
A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan
A hodgepodge of music business types make up this patchwork of pathos in Egan’s ode to the fracturing of our communication in the new century. A Visit from the Goon Squad could be an early sign of where the novel is headed in the iPad era.
Memorable Line: “Everybody sounds stoned, because they’re emailing people the whole time they’re talking to you.”
9
Great Jones Street by Don DeLillo
Bucky Wunderlick is a rock star with a world of fans waiting on his next word, but does he have anything left to say? DeLillo probes the bizarre power of 1970s pop fame, and urban decay, all the while suggesting the two might have more than a little to do with each other.
“’Fame,’ he said. ‘It won’t happen. But if it does happen. But it won’t happen. But if it does. But it won’t.’”
8
How the Mistakes Were Made by Tyler McMahon
Laura Loss is a musician-barista in Seattle’s nineties music scene searching for a way out, when she stubbles upon two young musicians looking for help fulfilling their rock dreams. The subsequent band, the Mistakes, make a few, with Laura revealing her role in their demise in this gripping rock confessional.
Memorable Line: “I sometimes wonder what would’ve become of underground music in this country had Ford never produced [the Econoline van].”
7
The Blue Bourbon Orchestra by Carson Mell
The only writer to appears on this list twice, Mell recounts the plight of middle-aged guitarist and wanderer Charles Leslie deBeau, who finds himself in the titular blues band, spending years touring the south on a shoestring and winding up with a murder rap. Mell refines his storytelling chops from Saguaro to create this heftier, more realistic tome, but still with his patented seductive voice.
Memorable Line: “You only get to choose one path. And it’s not even a path. We just call it that to feel comfortable.”
6
The Wishbones by Tom Perrotta
Dave Raymond loves nothing as much as playing in his wedding band the Wishbones, but at thirty-one, the rest of Dave’s life is crowding him toward something more substantial. Perrotta tells the tale of a reluctant adult who lives to play cover songs that make people sweat on the dance floor.
Memorable Line: “Once, out of curiosity, he squeezed himself into a pair of leather pants, and it hadn’t been a pretty sight.”
Check in on Thursday, when we'll do #5-2.
Yours in laying down the law,
Art
Check out the Trailer for Stuck Outside of Phoenix the Movie, which premiered in May 2013.
Or try Stuck Outside of Phoenix in print form for just $10.
Or try Stuck for your Kindle for just $2.99.
10
A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan
A hodgepodge of music business types make up this patchwork of pathos in Egan’s ode to the fracturing of our communication in the new century. A Visit from the Goon Squad could be an early sign of where the novel is headed in the iPad era.
Memorable Line: “Everybody sounds stoned, because they’re emailing people the whole time they’re talking to you.”
9
Great Jones Street by Don DeLillo
Bucky Wunderlick is a rock star with a world of fans waiting on his next word, but does he have anything left to say? DeLillo probes the bizarre power of 1970s pop fame, and urban decay, all the while suggesting the two might have more than a little to do with each other.
“’Fame,’ he said. ‘It won’t happen. But if it does happen. But it won’t happen. But if it does. But it won’t.’”
8
How the Mistakes Were Made by Tyler McMahon
Laura Loss is a musician-barista in Seattle’s nineties music scene searching for a way out, when she stubbles upon two young musicians looking for help fulfilling their rock dreams. The subsequent band, the Mistakes, make a few, with Laura revealing her role in their demise in this gripping rock confessional.
Memorable Line: “I sometimes wonder what would’ve become of underground music in this country had Ford never produced [the Econoline van].”
7
The Blue Bourbon Orchestra by Carson Mell
The only writer to appears on this list twice, Mell recounts the plight of middle-aged guitarist and wanderer Charles Leslie deBeau, who finds himself in the titular blues band, spending years touring the south on a shoestring and winding up with a murder rap. Mell refines his storytelling chops from Saguaro to create this heftier, more realistic tome, but still with his patented seductive voice.
Memorable Line: “You only get to choose one path. And it’s not even a path. We just call it that to feel comfortable.”
6
The Wishbones by Tom Perrotta
Dave Raymond loves nothing as much as playing in his wedding band the Wishbones, but at thirty-one, the rest of Dave’s life is crowding him toward something more substantial. Perrotta tells the tale of a reluctant adult who lives to play cover songs that make people sweat on the dance floor.
Memorable Line: “Once, out of curiosity, he squeezed himself into a pair of leather pants, and it hadn’t been a pretty sight.”
Check in on Thursday, when we'll do #5-2.
Yours in laying down the law,
Art
Check out the Trailer for Stuck Outside of Phoenix the Movie, which premiered in May 2013.

Or try Stuck Outside of Phoenix in print form for just $10.

Or try Stuck for your Kindle for just $2.99.
Published on September 11, 2013 07:17
September 10, 2013
Top Twenty Rock Novels of All Time: #15-11
What's this? Start at the beginning here.
15
The Last Rock Star Book, Or: Liz Phair, a Rant by Camden Joy
When Sioux City musician-narrator Camden Joy finds himself commissioned to write a “Where are they now?”-style biography of Liz Phair, he winds up revealing his own biography of failed love, obsession and institutionalization. Think Holden Caulfield pushing thirty in the 90s with a microcassette recorder.
Memorable line: “When we count one to ten … we don’t actually count but just repeat words we learned long ago.”
14
You Don’t Love Me Yet by Jonathan Lethem
Young, smart, and a bassist in an art rock band in 1980s Los Angeles, Lucinda Hoekke’s only problems are resisting the passion she feels for her guitarist—which would spell doom for her band—and The Complainer, a caller on the complaint line where she works who uses her vulnerability to leverage his way into her life. You Don’t Love Me Yet plays at the intersection of love, art and rock music, with Lucinda and her mates not paying enough attention to the road.
Memorable Line: “Falmouth’s first and most successful piece of art was himself, installed in the larger gallery of the world.”
13
A & R by Bill Flanagan
A & R tells the tale of Jim Cantone, who learned the music business during its Wild West days but finds the new 90s lot of corporate-thinkers disconcerting. This novel somehow succeeds in the all-but-impossible task of making a record label rep sympathetic.
Memorable Line: “These were people who shared nothing voluntarily, least of all their attention.”
12
Saguaro: The Life & Adventures of Bobby Allen Bird by Carson Mell
Saguaro is the tall-tale recounting of fatherless Arizonan Bobby Bird, who goes on to some success as a singer-songwriter but spends most of his life getting in and out of various entanglements with ladies and fringe types. Mell’s captivating, down-to-earth voice makes Saguaro completely devour-able.
Memorable Line: “This is a story I’m not too inclined to tell unless you are particularly interested in tales of full grown men turning into worthless assholes.”
11
Wise Young Fool by Sean Beaudoin
Wise Young Fool is about teen guitarist Ritchie Sudden, who’s found himself in a juvenile lock-up after the events from the night of his band’s first gig. Beaudoin unravels the conflicts that lead to Sudden’s detention by skillfully interspersing both front and back story, and with the verbal alacrity of a prose gymnast.
Memorable Line: “Ravenna’s caught two hundred meters below the reef, unwanted sexual pressure crushing her lungs, sharks below and the bends above, nowhere to go but farther inside herself.”
Check in Wednesday for #10-6.
Yours in laying down the law,
Art
Check out the Trailer for Stuck Outside of Phoenix the Movie, which premiered in May 2013.
Or try Stuck Outside of Phoenix in print form for just $10.
Or try Stuck for your Kindle for just $2.99.
15
The Last Rock Star Book, Or: Liz Phair, a Rant by Camden Joy
When Sioux City musician-narrator Camden Joy finds himself commissioned to write a “Where are they now?”-style biography of Liz Phair, he winds up revealing his own biography of failed love, obsession and institutionalization. Think Holden Caulfield pushing thirty in the 90s with a microcassette recorder.
Memorable line: “When we count one to ten … we don’t actually count but just repeat words we learned long ago.”
14
You Don’t Love Me Yet by Jonathan Lethem
Young, smart, and a bassist in an art rock band in 1980s Los Angeles, Lucinda Hoekke’s only problems are resisting the passion she feels for her guitarist—which would spell doom for her band—and The Complainer, a caller on the complaint line where she works who uses her vulnerability to leverage his way into her life. You Don’t Love Me Yet plays at the intersection of love, art and rock music, with Lucinda and her mates not paying enough attention to the road.
Memorable Line: “Falmouth’s first and most successful piece of art was himself, installed in the larger gallery of the world.”
13
A & R by Bill Flanagan
A & R tells the tale of Jim Cantone, who learned the music business during its Wild West days but finds the new 90s lot of corporate-thinkers disconcerting. This novel somehow succeeds in the all-but-impossible task of making a record label rep sympathetic.
Memorable Line: “These were people who shared nothing voluntarily, least of all their attention.”
12
Saguaro: The Life & Adventures of Bobby Allen Bird by Carson Mell
Saguaro is the tall-tale recounting of fatherless Arizonan Bobby Bird, who goes on to some success as a singer-songwriter but spends most of his life getting in and out of various entanglements with ladies and fringe types. Mell’s captivating, down-to-earth voice makes Saguaro completely devour-able.
Memorable Line: “This is a story I’m not too inclined to tell unless you are particularly interested in tales of full grown men turning into worthless assholes.”
11
Wise Young Fool by Sean Beaudoin
Wise Young Fool is about teen guitarist Ritchie Sudden, who’s found himself in a juvenile lock-up after the events from the night of his band’s first gig. Beaudoin unravels the conflicts that lead to Sudden’s detention by skillfully interspersing both front and back story, and with the verbal alacrity of a prose gymnast.
Memorable Line: “Ravenna’s caught two hundred meters below the reef, unwanted sexual pressure crushing her lungs, sharks below and the bends above, nowhere to go but farther inside herself.”
Check in Wednesday for #10-6.
Yours in laying down the law,
Art
Check out the Trailer for Stuck Outside of Phoenix the Movie, which premiered in May 2013.

Or try Stuck Outside of Phoenix in print form for just $10.

Or try Stuck for your Kindle for just $2.99.
Published on September 10, 2013 09:13