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9 Reviews
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A great rock original now shows real literary talent,
This review is from: Carp Fishing on Valium and Other Tales of the Stranger Road Traveled (Hardcover)
I'm not a total Graham Parker fan but am a huge admirer of his best work. The substance of his songs, as well as their music and performance, are amongst the best I know and Parker has never had the credit he deserves, especially for his Stiff work which clearly influenced Elvis Costello. These stories show the same essentially noir sensibility -- wry, involved, bitter-sweet -- which informs the songs. After reading it, my guess is you'll want to go and listen to one of Parker's great albums like Burning Questions. On the other hand you might like to buy an album first -- and then get the book. Either way, you're in for some quality stuff. It reminds me of the vast amount of talent that flowered in the days when Notting Hill was a real place and not just a Julia Roberts vehicle. All Parker's quirky, edgy seminal music is reflected in this outstanding first story collection. Mary Morris
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Clever Name. Bad Book.,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Carp Fishing on Valium (Paperback)
Maybe it's just my fast paced brain, but I found that this book often read like a transcript of a conversation between completely uninteresting people. It's slow, it's confusing, and often consists of almost incoherent conversations between people who cuss at each other a lot.Fans of Graham Parker may find me harsh, and if you're a fan of Graham Parker you may want to give it a try. For me, the book just didn't live up to the clever title.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Starts OK, Goes Astray,
By Jake W. (New York, NY) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Carp Fishing on Valium and Other Tales of the Stranger Road Traveled (Hardcover)
I started reading this as a beach book and I enjoyed the first, maybe, eight stories. The stories about his childhood and adolescence were charming and well-written. I had to put this book down, though, when Parker strayed into the dreaded "live out my unfulfilled rock fantasy" territory. Vignettes are interesting. Reading about some obscure rocker's fantasy to sing with the Stones via a self-gratifying, markedly unclever writing style is *not* interesting. If you must buy this book, tear out the last few chapters before you read it.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Don't waste your time,
By jdt2 (San Francisco, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Carp Fishing on Valium (Paperback)
A collection of random, boring, and poorly written vignettes. I guess Parker's clout as a recording artist helped him land a publisher. It surely wasn't his talent. The title and cover art are the best parts...
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A delight,
By A Customer
This review is from: Carp Fishing on Valium and Other Tales of the Stranger Road Traveled (Hardcover)
It should come as no surprise to find that he is good with words. Graham Parker has been delighting his loyal musical fans for decades now with his own brand of integral rock and roll, a style marked by thoughtful, poetic lyrics, deft melodies, and a passionate energy. But in "Carp Fishing on Valium" Parker shows himself to be a fine storyteller too, in a series of endearing and often piercing tales ranging from boyhood escapades in Surrey, in a Huck Finn vein, to deliciously worldly-wise rock-star-on-the-road stories, with some surprisingly poignant twists. Parker's characteristic energy and fine musical ear give his prose an engaging vigor and freshness; and in these stories he shows us not only the tough kid from the south of England, with his dark, sly humor and his combative ethic, but also the vulnerable sides of a complex man, the fears, and doubts, and the touching love for nature, in stories lit at unexpected moments by a furtive, almost involuntary tenderness.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
The joys of catch and release,
This review is from: Carp Fishing on Valium and Other Tales of the Stranger Road Traveled (Hardcover)
Despite the title of Parker's book and my review, this book is not about angling. _Carp Fishing on Valium_ is a collection of linked stories that follow the life of a British musician named Brian Porker. Author Parker's wit, and Porker's often stumbling ways make for enjoyable reading. Further, some provocative observations reveal a yearning on the part of the author to contribute a work of serious literature. Porker's experiences reflect a number of episodes in recent history (such as the cutting of Mr. Bobbitt), as well as delving into some of the underlying cultural issues, including gender politics and issues relating to the profit-driven music industry. Porker fancies himself a serious artist hemmed in by other's expectations, but also hindered by bad habits.This book is more serious than much of the throw-away fiction that dominates best-seller lists. The entertaining narrative hints at a deeper purpose. But, in this ambition, the author was only partly successful. Reading _Carp Fishing on Valium_ provided an evening of laughter, as well as briefly stimulating productive reflection. But, having finished it, it sits on the shelf gathering dust. It offers little of enduring value. Reading this book was like catching and releasing a small trout. It is pure joy for a few minutes, but when the game is over, not much has changed.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Interesting Coming-of-Age stories,
By D. Bratcher (Texas, USA) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Carp Fishing on Valium (Paperback)
This novel is novel for us Americans as it's written by a Brit with Wit! haha I really enjoyed these stories, I was even able to relate to some of them, even though I'm an American female.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Be prepared for a surprise,
By Jersey Kid (Katy, Texas, America!) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Carp Fishing on Valium (Paperback)
A series of very loosely related narratives that serve to confirm that - whether writing songs or blank verse - Graham Parker is eccentric, ascerbic and down-right brilliant at pulling at your heart strings and leg. If there is one song that I heard in my head while reading these stories, it was "You Can't Be Too Strong," his lament about abortion. You're shocked by the content and themes but yet you can related them on a multiplicity of levels.
But, don't reject reading this book for fear it is heavy, depressing reading. Instead it is the life story of a sort of alter-ego of Mr. Parker named Brian Porker. The are enough similarities between the two men that you constantly risk trying to make connections between the two. I do not know if Parker grew up a military brat as Mr. Porker did. I know Mr. Parker did interact with Southside Johnny and others in the Asbury Park music mafia. I assumed as it went on for several years, it was on friendly terms. Brian Porker, on the other hand, seemed to despise the thinly disguised characterizations of Miami Steve van Zandt and Jon Bon Jovi. Other stories tell of audtioning to replace the late Mick Jagger; seeing and hearing a rocket-powered passenger aircraft lift off while fishing while high on valium and trying to save a bird in Cleveland, Ohio while on an apparently dead-end tour as a stand-up comedian. It's best to read more of this and think less about it. I do have to wonder what is Mr. Parker's view of birds. One of the early stories as well as one of the last is driven by Porker's revelation about birds; the former will almost break your heart.
4.0 out of 5 stars
A very entertaining collection,
By
This review is from: Carp Fishing on Valium (Paperback)
Graham Parker? The singer-songwriter behind such brilliant albums as "Howlin' Wind" and "Squeezing Out Sparks?" What's he doing writing a book? That's what I thought when I came across this book. But think about it: song lyrics are basically short stories, so why not? I was pleaseantly surprised to find a very funny, often moving, collection here. Ths book is basically a collection of short stories that follow the life of a young boy into his life as a famous rock star. Parker has a natural gift for dialogue. My favorite story by far is "Me and the Stones," in which our narrator is handpicked by Keith Richards to replace the recently deceased Mick Jagger. Sound strange? Yes, but also very funny. Buy it! |
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Carp Fishing on Valium and Other Tales of the Stranger Road Traveled by Graham Parker (Hardcover - June 23, 2000)
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