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Sarah Priscus

Author of Groupies: A Novel

1 Work 64 Members 4 Reviews

Works by Sarah Priscus

Groupies: A Novel (2022) 64 copies

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Full of cliches, a tad salacious, but a satisfying ending.
 
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cmnorman | 3 other reviews | Oct 19, 2022 |
I liked this book, but I didn't love it. The beginning felt like the author had read I'm With the Band by Pamela Des Barres and changed things slightly, but as the book went on, it veered off more from that. I also figured out what was going to happen very early in the book.
 
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ReneeGreen | 3 other reviews | Aug 12, 2022 |
The early 70s groupie scene in L.A. with budding photographer (polaroids) Faun being swept into that world. Includes imaginary photographs, similar to as-planned. The photography figures into the plot when Faun sells some compromising shots that end up in a scandal rag, leading to jealous and violent lead singer Cal attacking his new wife Josie and Josie's fateful retaliation.
½
 
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beaujoe | 3 other reviews | Jul 18, 2022 |
Faun Novack has recently lost her controlling mother and is seeking freedom and a new way of living. She contacts her high school best friend, Josie Norfolk, and asks if she can come live with her in California and start over. Josie quickly tells her she can; not knowing that at that moment both of their lives would be changed forever. Together, they live the life of groupies of the band Holiday Sun, a group they loved during high school. Josie is now dating the lead singer, Cal, and gives Faun entry into the world of loving a rock group. Ever armed with her Polaroid, Faun takes candid and staged photos of the group hoping it will jumpstart her career as a photographer. In a moment of anger and jealousy, Faun takes a photo of Josie kissing another man which she then sells later. When this photo is published and begins making the rounds at a Holiday Sun party, the unimaginable happens and the lives of Faun and Josie are irrevocably changed in very different ways.

This book was touted as perfect for fans of Daisy Jones & the Six but I felt the only thing they had in common was the time period, the music, and the drug usage. Faun struck me as far too dependent on those around her for love and affection, which is readily admitted in the story but it became her whole persona - there was not much else real about her. Josie was a bit of a complex character longing for the love she had not been given at home and would do or say anything she had to in order to receive that love. I found myself being far more sympathetic to a secondary character than the main.
… (more)
 
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Micareads | 3 other reviews | Jun 26, 2022 |

Statistics

Works
1
Members
64
Popularity
#264,968
Rating
3.1
Reviews
4
ISBNs
7
Languages
1

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