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People at Work: The Rock Star
People at Work: The Rock Star
Oct 3, 2024 7:23 AM

Author:Jason Hazeley,Joel Morris

People at Work: The Rock Star

THE PERFECT GIFT for the music lover.

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'This is the rock star. His name is Bob Dylan.

Bob is rehearsing with his band. It takes a long time.

First the band have to learn all of Bob's famous songs.

Then Bob has to think of worse tunes he can sing over all of them.'

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'Coldplay's singer Chris Martin has spent weeks working with an important stylist. They have come up with an exciting look for the band's new tour.

'These great clothes make me look really interesting,' thinks Chris as he sits down at the piano to practise another slow, sad song that gets slightly louder at the end.'

__________________________________

This delightful book is the latest in the series of Ladybird books which have been specially planned to help grown-ups with the world about them.

The large clear script, the careful choice of words, the frequent repetition and the thoughtful matching of text with pictures all enable grown-ups to think they have taught themselves to cope. Featuring original Ladybird artwork alongside brilliantly funny, brand new text.

'Hilarious' Stylist

Other new titles for Autumn 2017:

How it Works: The Brother

How it Works: The Sister

How it Works: The Baby

The Ladybird Book of the Ex

The Ladybird Book of the Nerd

The Ladybird Book of the New You

The Ladybird Book of Balls

The Ladybird Book of the Big Night Out

The Ladybird Book of the Quiet Night In

A Ladybird First Grown-Up Picture Book

Previous titles in the Ladybirds for Grown Ups series:

How it Works: The Husband

How it Works: The Wife

How it Works: The Mum

How it Works: The Dad

The Ladybird Book of the Mid-Life Crisis

The Ladybird Book of the Hangover

The Ladybird Book of Mindfulness

The Ladybird Book of the Shed

The Ladybird Book of Dating

The Ladybird Book of the Hipster

How it Works: The Student

How it Works: The Cat

How it Works: The Dog

How it Works: The Grandparent

The Ladybird Book of Red Tape

The Ladybird Book of the People Next Door

The Ladybird Book of the Sickie

The Ladybird Book of the Zombie Apocalypse

The Ladybird Book of the Do-Gooder

Reviews

Hilarious

—— Stylist

Hardly a soul writes of the listening and playing of music with such insight and tenderness

—— Patti Smith , New York Times Book Review

Their words tessellate perfectly, forcing the neurons in your brain into a brave new quest for artistic divinity… A book for people transfixed by the minutia of creativity.

—— Shortlist

High Fidelity for classical music fans.

—— Publishers Weekly

These dialogues...add up to a sprawling feast of Mahler-style “polytonality” - or, alternatively, the sort of protean jam-session that Monk and Parker relished.

—— Boyd Tonkin , Arts Desk

Murakami is Japan's greatest living writer

—— Washington Post

Its cool, conversational style is one of the trademarks of Murakami’s writing – his novels all have the easy calm of a bar room dialogue – and Absolutely On Music has the particular feel of sitting at a table with two friends while they bat around their ideas.

—— Ross McIndoe , Skinny

It’s a conversation that is well worth hearing.

—— Richard Osborne , Gramophone

A lively rumination on classical music.

—— Keeley Bolger , Belfast Telegraph Morning

Absolutely on Music is an intimate and fascinating conversation between two maestros… [A] compelling, moving novel.

—— Scottish Women

Murakami’s grasp of music is frequently both astonishing and inspiring. He has incredible ears and is able to distinguish and annunciate the smallest differences in interpretations… When Murakami writes in prose, he does so with the quick charm and alluring detail that fans of his novels will relish.

—— Andrew Mellor , Rhinegold

It's good to know that, while my body rusts, I can keep my mind stretched and nimble by reading Zadie Smith

—— Observer

A preturnaturally gifted writer with a voice that's street-smart and learned, sassy and philosophical all at the same time

—— The New York Times

One of the most brilliant and inspiring things I've read in years. Couldn't put it down. This book is freedom

—— Chris Kraus, author of I Love Dick

The seedy side of the golden age of Hollywood and Los Angeles is thrown into sharp relief in this fascinating oral history. Tales of the stars, the fallen idols, and the never-beens from the Twenties right up to the Nineties.

—— Daily Mail

This gossipy exploration of life in the gilded cage from one of its own is packed with anecdotes… Wealth, fame, beauty and status are a heady mix in Jean Stein’s history of Hollywood told through the first-hand accounts of those who lived and worked there.

—— Fiona Wilson , The Times

Monstrous behaviour and vanity suffuse this oral history of Hollywood’s troubled dynasties… Tragedy lurks around the manicured lawns and marbled halls.

—— Anthony Quinn , Guardian

The anecdotes come so thick and fast it’s like being machine-gunned with marshmallows. Gradually, though, the mood darkens, the catalogue of vulgarity, cruelty and insanity takes its toll. While the Technicolor tour is relentlessly fascinating, it is reassuring to be shown in black and white that, in La-La Land at least, with the millions comes endless misery.

—— Mark Sanderson , Evening Standard

Jean Stein’s approach to family history is unconventional… Stein weaves them together with immense narrative skill.

—— Christopher Silvester , Spears Wealth Management Survey

The stories are mesmerising… Great for people who want to see beyond the world of make-believe.

—— William Leith , Evening Standard

A very dark oral history of Hollywood… mesmerising.

—— i

Engaging… Hytner proves an erudite chronicler of his notable successes, while not being afraid to acknowledge some of the more egregious failures on his watch. A must-read for anyone interested in theatre.

—— Alexander Larman , The Observer

Hytner chronicles the highs – and occasional lows – of running the National with crisp wit and deep affection

—— Jane Shilling , Daily Mail

Book of the day

—— The Independent

A sensitive, sweetly melancholic story of music, connection and community

—— S Magazine

BOOK OF THE WEEK: An uplifting read…full of humour and authentic characters

—— Midweek Extra

Breezily written, heart-warming and unashamedly sentimental… [a] modern fairy tale

—— Mail on Sunday

Rachel Joyce returns to some of the themes in her bestselling debut The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry: loss, the past and the bonds that can be forged with strangers. This time the pilgrimage is through music.

—— Press Association

A quirky, romantic fairy tale perfect for summer.

—— You Magazine

My Christmas pick: I love any novel by Rachel Joyce, whose The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry was a huge success. Now she has created another Pied Piper of the heart in Frank, the proprietor of The Music Shop...This bewitching love story sings out the unique beauty of every human being, leaving you uplifted.

—— Bel Mooney , Daily Mail

The Music Shop is a one gulp, super-satisfying read. Love it, love it, love it.

—— Sir Lenny Henry

Joyce, a British actress and playwright, whose first novel, The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, was longlisted for the Man Booker, continues to enchant and break hearts with her lovable misfits trying to survive in a modern world determined to pass them by. Irresistible.

—— Beth Anderson , Library Journal

An unforgettable story of music, loss and hope. Fans of High Fidelity, meet your next quirky love story. Vinyl fans, hold onto your turntables - Joyce's latest is a buoyant homage to the healing power of music well-played.

—— PEOPLE magazine

‘The Music Shop’ is an unabashedly sentimental tribute to the healing power of great songs, and Joyce is hip to greatness in any key…. [The novel] captures the sheer, transformative joy of romance — ‘a ballooning of happiness.’ Joyce’s understated humor…offers something like the pleasure of A.A. Milne for adults. She has a kind of sweetness that’s never saccharine, a kind of simplicity that’s never simplistic…. I wouldn’t change a single note. Rachel Joyce, if music be the food of love, write on!

—— The Washington Post

Rachel Joyce’s charming and deceptively simple fourth novel chronicles an offbeat love story between a mystery woman and an ardent, if lonely, collector and gently explores the power of memory and music and the certainty of change…. love, friendship, and especially the healing powers of music all rise together into a triumphant crescendo…. This lovely novel is as satisfying and enlightening as the music that suffuses its every page.

—— The Boston Globe

Magnificent…. Joyce’s novel is intellectually and emotionally satisfying on every possible level. If you love words, if you love music, if you love, this is 2018’s first must-read, and it will be without question one of the year’s best.

—— Top Pick in Fiction, January 2018 , BookPage

Joyce has a knack for quickly sketching characters in a way that makes them stick…. This is a touching, sometimes funny book about surviving change, the power of music and the importance of having a community — wacky or not. As with all of Joyce’s books, it will surprise you.

—— Minneapolis Star Tribune

Joyce…continues to enchant and break hearts with her lovable misfits trying to survive in a modern world determined to pass them by. Irresistible.

—— Library Journal

Magical…. [Rachel] Joyce has a winner in this deceptively simple love story…. Joyce’s odes to music…and the notion that the perfect song can transform one’s life make this novel a triumph.

—— Publishers Weekly

Whether on foot, as in her novel The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, or track by track, on this unlikely musical odyssey, Joyce excels in enveloping readers in epic journeys of lost connections and loving reunions.

—— Booklist

[Rachel] Joyce sets up a charming cast of characters, and her spirals into the sonic landscapes of brilliant musicians are delightful, casting a vivid backdrop for the quietly desperate romance between Frank and Ilse. From nocturnes to punk, this musical romance is ripe for filming.

—— Kirkus Reviews
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