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    Fever Pitch
    Book (Riverhead Trade)


    Riverhead Trade

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    A Long Way Down
    Book (Riverhead Trade)


    Riverhead Trade

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    Book (Arthur A. Levine Books)


    Arthur A. Levine Books

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    High Fidelity
    Book (Riverhead Trade)


    Riverhead Trade

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    Juliet, Naked: a novel
    Book (Riverhead Hardcover)


    Riverhead Hardcover

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    Speaking with the Angel
    Book (Penguin Books, Limited (UK))


    Penguin Books, Limited (UK)

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Hornby Nick

Speaking with the Angel

Penguin Books, Limited (UK)

List Price: $17.75
Price: $7.10
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Description

A dozen of the most successful and popular writers today including: Helen Fielding, Robert Harris, Patrick Marber, Zadie Smith, John O'Farrell, Roddy Doyle, Melissa Bank and Irvine Welsh have written 6000-word fictional monologues along the lines of Alan Bennet's "Talking Heads". And Colin Firth makes his debut as a fiction writer. The result is a book of completely original stories that have heart, soul and wit. All the writers have given their work free, and Penguin is giving GBP1 per copy sold to the TreeHouse Trust, a charity which is setting up a unique school for autistic children
Juliet, Naked: a novel

Riverhead Hardcover

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From the beloved New York Times- bestselling author, a quintessential Nick Hornby tale of music, superfandom, and the truths and lies we tell ourselves about life and love.

Annie loves Duncan-or thinks she does. Duncan loves Annie, but then, all of a sudden, he doesn't. Duncan really loves Tucker Crowe, a reclusive Dylanish singer-songwriter who stopped making music ten years ago. Annie stops loving Duncan, and starts getting her own life.

In doing so, she initiates an e-mail correspondence with Tucker, and a connection is forged between two lonely people who are looking for more out of what they've got. Tucker's been languishing (and he's unnervingly aware of it), living in rural Pennsylvania with what he sees as his one hope for redemption amid a life of emotional and artistic ruin-his young son, Jackson. But then there's also the new material he's about to release to the world: an acoustic, stripped-down version of his greatest album, Juliet-entitled, Juliet, Naked.

What happens when a washed-up musician looks for another chance? And miles away, a restless, childless woman looks for a change? Juliet, Naked is a powerfully engrossing, humblingly humorous novel about music, love, loneliness, and the struggle to live up to one's promise.
High Fidelity

Riverhead Trade

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Now a major motion picture from Touchstone Pictures.

Rob is a pop music junkie who runs his own semi-failing record store. His girlfriend, Laura, has just left him for the guy upstairs, and Rob is both miserable and relieved. After all, could he have spent his life with someone who has a bad record collection? Rob seeks refuge in the company of the offbeat clerks at his store, who endlessly review their top five films (Reservoir Dogs...); top five Elvis Costello songs ("Alison"...); top five episodes of Cheers (the one where Woody sang his stupid song to Kelly...). Rob tries dating a singer whose rendition of "Baby, I Love Your Way" makes him cry. But maybe it's just that he's always wanted to sleep with someone who has a record contract. Then he sees Laura again. And Rob begins to think (awful as it sounds) that life as an episode of thirtysomething, with all the kids and marriages and barbecues and k.d. lang CD's that this implies, might not be so bad.


It has been said often enough that baby boomers are a television generation, but the very funny novel High Fidelity reminds that in a way they are the record-album generation as well. This funny novel is obsessed with music; Hornby's narrator is an early-thirtysomething English guy who runs a London record store. He sells albums recorded the old-fashioned way--on vinyl--and is having a tough time making other transitions as well, specifically adulthood. The book is in one sense a love story, both sweet and interesting; most entertaining, though, are the hilarious arguments over arcane matters of pop music.
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Arthur A. Levine Books

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Description

Eoin Colfer, Nick Hornby, Roddy Doyle, Linda Sue Park, David Almond -- top authors team up to tell the story of a man who magically connects the lives and times of young people around the world.

A video message from a dead person. A larcenous teenager. A man who can stick his left toe behind his head and in his ear. An epileptic girl seeking answers in a fairy tale. A boy who loses everything in World War II, and his brother who loses even more. And a family with a secret so big that it changes everything.
The world's best beloved authors each contribute a chapter in the life of the mysterious George "Gee" Keane, photographer, soldier, adventurer and enigma. Under different pens, a startling portrait emerges of a man, his family, and his gloriously complicated tangle of a life.

A Long Way Down

Riverhead Trade

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Description

In his fourth novel, New York Times-bestselling author Nick Hornby mines the hearts and psyches of four lost souls who connect just when they've reached the end of the line.

Meet Martin, JJ, Jess, and Maureen. Four people who come together on New Year's Eve: a former TV talk show host, a musician, a teenage girl, and a mother. Three are British, one is American. They encounter one another on the roof of Topper's House, a London destination famous as the last stop for those ready to end their lives.

In four distinct and riveting first-person voices, Nick Hornby tells a story of four individuals confronting the limits of choice, circumstance, and their own mortality. This is a tale of connections made and missed, punishing regrets, and the grace of second chances.

Intense, hilarious, provocative, and moving, A Long Way Down is a novel about suicide that is, surprisingly, full of life.


Fever Pitch

Riverhead Trade

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Description

Nick Hornby has been a soccer fan since the moment he was conceived. Fever Pitch is his tribute to a lifelong obsession. Part autobiography, part comedy, part incisive analysis of insanity, Hornby's award-winning memoir captures the fever pitch of fandom—its agony and ecstasy, its community, its defining role in thousands of young men's coming of age stories. Fever Pitch is one for the home team. But above all, it is one for everyone who knows what it really means to have a losing season.

In the States, Nick Hornby is best know as the author of High Fidelity and About a Boy, two wickedly funny novels about being thirtysomething and going nowhere fast. In Britain he is revered for his status as a fanatical football writer (sorry, fanatical soccer writer), owing to Fever Pitch--which is both an autobiography and a footballing Bible rolled into one. Hornby pinpoints 1968 as his formative year--the year he turned 11, the year his parents separated, and the year his father first took him to watch Arsenal play. The author quickly moved "way beyond fandom" into an extreme obsession that has dominated his life, loves, and relationships. His father had initially hoped that Saturday afternoon matches would draw the two closer together, but instead Hornby became completely besotted with the game at the expense of any conversation: "Football may have provided us with a new medium through which we could communicate, but that was not to say that we used it, or what we chose to say was necessarily positive." Girlfriends also played second fiddle to one ball and 11 men. He fantasizes that even if a girlfriend "went into labor at an impossible moment" he would not be able to help out until after the final whistle.

Fever Pitch is not a typical memoir--there are no chapters, just a series of match reports falling into three time frames (childhood, young adulthood, manhood). While watching the May 2, 1972, Reading v. Arsenal match, it became embarrassingly obvious to the then 15-year-old that his white, suburban, middle-class roots made him a wimp with no sense of identity: "Yorkshire men, Lancastrians, Scots, the Irish, blacks, the rich, the poor, even Americans and Australians have something they can sit in pubs and bars and weep about." But a boy from Maidenhead could only dream of coming from a place with "its own tube station and West Indian community and terrible, insoluble social problems."

Fever Pitch reveals the very special intricacies of British football, which readers new to the game will find astonishing, and which Hornby presents with remarkable humor and honesty--the "unique" chants sung at matches, the cold rain-soaked terraces, giant cans of warm beer, the trains known as football specials carrying fans to and from matches in prisonlike conditions, bottles smashing on the tracks, thousands of policemen waiting in anticipation for the cargo of hooligans. The sport and one team in particular have crept into every aspect of Hornby's life--making him see the world through Arsenal-tinted spectacles. --Naomi Gesinger


Hornby Nick News




People: Jacqui Smith, Nick Hornby, Tracy Ward and Frederick Forsyth - Times Online
People: Jacqui Smith, Nick Hornby, Tracy Ward and Frederick Forsyth - Times Online Times OnlinePeople: Jacqui Smith, Nick Hornby, Tracy Ward and Frederick ForsythNick Hornby recalls a “mortifyingly undignified” argument with an airline passenger who refused to believe that he'd written High Fidelity. 'I've watched that movie loads of times,' she said. 'If it was a book, I'd have noticed on the credits.

No cheesy, cheeky Nick Hornby dicklit here, I promise - Minnesota Reads
No cheesy, cheeky Nick Hornby dicklit here, I promiseThis is no cheesy, cheeky Nick Hornby kind of dicklit novel, and I think tha's why I liked it so much. Really, I've read about 318 rock and roll books by and about musicgeekboys who refuse to grow up. They are all the same, after about the sixth one. Chan Poling to perform at Arthur Phillips' Talk of the Stacks

Summer reading for pleasure's sake - Santa Rosa Press Democrat
Summer reading for pleasure's sakeBy leaving show reviews and comments on bar coasters and later stalking her until — ah, let's not ruin it for you. Let's just say, while loaded with enough musical references to make Nick Hornby proud, the book never tries too hard to be cute.

The Morning Skate: NHL and Coyotes Agree (Sort of), Committed ... - New York Times
The Morning Skate: NHL and Coyotes Agree (Sort of), Committed Lance Hornby has details in The Toronto Sun Skating Around: Here's some gossip and rumors. Suspend all disbelief ye who read further. According to RDS.ca, pending UFA Sergei Fedorov is planning to leave the Caps and the NHL and return to Russia to play

Why we should all grieve for Newcastle United - Times Online
Why we should all grieve for Newcastle UnitedAt the end of Fever Pitch, the most famous football book of recent times, Nick Hornby declares that his support for his team has been tempered by growing emotional maturity. Although he still cares about how they do, he no longer allows his weekly