Daisy Jones & the Six

11 08 2023

Anyone who read this book seemed to rave about it, so I wanted to give it a try, and they weren’t wrong!

It’s written in a really unusual style – the book is about the [fictional] rise and fall of the band The Six, and the singer Daisy Jones, but is written as interviews with everyone looking back on that time. It reads like one of those documentaries with a load of talking heads that tell the story with a very occasional narrator, really clever.

Because the interviews with the author are done separately, you sometimes get little bits of the story that contradict from person to person, which makes it more realistic really when they’re remembering that far back.

The story they tell itself is gripping, the life of rock stars in the 1970s, with all you would expect to come with that – I flew through the book.

The only slight downside for me (and slight spoiler warning here) was a little twist at the end that was somewhat reminiscent of How I Met Your Mother, which I had never really liked. But I’d only knock off maybe a quarter of a star off for that, as the rest was so good.





The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo – by Taylor Jenkins Reid

28 11 2022

People seem to RAVE about Taylor Jenkins Reid’s books, this one particularly, so I picked it up to give it a try.

Evelyn was a Hollywood icon from the 1950s to 1980s and now, approaching 80 years old, is ready to tell all. Out of the blue Monique, a random magazine reporter with no apparent connection to Evelyn, receives a request from her to write her memoir.

The majority of the book is Evelyn narrating her life story to Monique, of her films, her scandals, and of course, her many marriages. Monique asks her early on who the love of her life was, and that will be revealed in time. But while taking down her story, Monique doesn’t quite understand why she’s been chosen to do the job.

A book that needs to fit in seven marriages, I was concerned it might just read as a sort of list – seven shorter stories tenuously tied together maybe. But it flowed seamlessly and was such an addictive read!