According to the blurb, The King of Good Intentions is "set in Los Angeles in the early 90s" and "chronicles the early days of an indie band as they meet, practice, make their first record, and get their first break/big gig". Although, really, this is only half the story.
A picaresque novel (if you're one of those people who lives and dies by whether Wikipedia says its true or not, then Wikipedia says this of that: a novel that "depicts, in realistic and often humorous detail, the adventures of a roguish hero of low social class who lives by his wits in a corrupt society"). And what could be more roguishly heroic than being an over educated, underemployed struggling rock musician?
Despite being (I gather) pretty autobiographical - song titles from the fictitious band The Weird Sisters match up with John Andrew Fredrick's actual band, The Black Watch, and the timeline kinda coincides with when TBW's debut album was made) - the novel isn't primarily concerned with the making of said record. No, really, the entire plot is just a framework in order for Fredrick to ruminate of a variety of often tangential topics ... we get chapter-long digressions into teen masturbation, a couple of hilarious chapters taking place in LA parties, and sub-plots illustrating the (ahem) joys of being a substitute high school teacher.
All of which, topic-wise, is up my alley, so to speak. What elevates this particular tome above others of its ilk, though, is Fredrick's dense, wordy and frequently laugh-out-loud (but never LOL) prose. This is highbrow/lowbrow fiction of the highest order.
If there's one suggestion (read: "complaint") to be made, it's that the context of this novel is even better if you're familiar with Fredrick's oeuvre as frontman for the aforementioned The Black Watch. The generally excellent publishing house, Verse Chorus Press, really dropped the ball here ... including a sampler CD, download code for a 'greatest hits' compilation or at least a few of the songs mentioned in the book, or else a reissue of some of the really early, vinyl-only TBW material is really a missed opportunity of the highest order. That being said, if your interest is even slightly piqued as to what the fictional music might have sounded like, scour Amazon.com's marketplace for a copy of either Flowering, Amphetamines or The King of Good Intentions (the album). You won't be disappointed.