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Twelve Bar Blues
 
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Twelve Bar Blues [Hardcover]


5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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5.0 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing and intricate storytelling, Feb 25 2004
By 
This review is from: Twelve Bar Blues (Paperback)
Patrick Neate has created an absolute jem in "Twelve Bar Blues", a story spanning three continents and several generations of people. The best of the interwoven stories is that of Lick Holden, the forgotten jazz musician who has become more legend than anything, and his struggles with the tough Louisiana life, plus his development into a semi-famed musician.

Everything about this book is completely engrossing, and it ends up being quite the page-turner. The plot, the characters and the style really make this a winner. Neate is a brilliant story-teller, and "Twelve Bar Blues" is worthy of all its acclaim.

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5.0 out of 5 stars fantastic, April 18 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Twelve Bar Blues (Paperback)
While overseas, I picked this book up on a whim; I was pleasantly surprised. Neate is an excellent story-teller and and even better writer. I am surprised that it is not a best-seller back in the states...by far the best piece of fiction I have read in years.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Dark horse but worthy Whitbread winner : an amazing read !, Aug 27 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Twelve Bar Blues (Paperback)
Patrick Neate's "Twelve Bar Blues (TBB)" richly deserves the Whitbread Book of the Year Award. It's an epic novel tracing the torrid lives and lineage of gifted black cornet player Lick Holden from New Orleans who in the 1920s spends half his life searching for his coffee coloured half-sister Sylvie and present day retired prostitute Sylvia Di Napoli from London who will go to the ends of this world to discover her lost identity. Interlocking with these two fascinating stories is an experimental piece of magical realism that connects the past of Lick and Sylvia with the present in black Africa. Though the unfolding plot reveals a sprawling family tree that cuts across three continents, it isn't hard to guess how Lick and Sylvia are related to one another. Just as Lick survives many close shaves with Naps as his guardian angel, Sylvia's chance encounter with white drifter Jim Tulloch on route to New York turns out to be the source of her redemption. There is a recurring line in the novel about knowing or not knowing one's past and its bearing on the present that best sums up the quest of our protagonists. Lick knows his past but how has this helped him deal with his one obsession ? Sylvia, on the other hand, is resigned to a bleak future as an ex-prostitute and retired singer. She thinks discovering her past will save her but is too jaded to see that redemption is sitting right next to her. Who can blame her, though ? Fate and chance have a way of bringing a curious symmetry to life that we least expect. The African subplot in Neate's enthralling tale of ethnicity, lost identity and fate isn't as loose and arbitrary as it seems. The village chief has no hangups about his past. He's proudly African and has no slave history in his family to contend with. His problem is with the future, in particular an urban wife and the uncertain paternity of the child she's carrying. TBB is a phenomenal literary achievement. It's earthy, brutal and passionate, yet wonderfully lyrical and otherworldly at the same time. Just as the fourth part of Lick's anatomy expands when he's riding the crest of a note from his cornet, the novel is magically transformed whenever Neate comes up with a passage that resonates with irony. TBB is a masterpiece of modern fiction that has to be read. Don't miss it !
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