Bachelor Kisses

by Nick Earls

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Bachelor Kisses is a comic story of modern love and life when you're 20-something, single and male. It is the mess Jon Marshall makes of his life when it stops making sense - a comedy of fallibility and misjudgements. Jon, Rick and Jen share takeaway food rituals, sporadic cocktail nights and the quest for love. Rick seems destined to long, lonely nights beneath his Porky Pig doona. Jen consumes men like chocolate bars. And Jon gets lucky in a way he's never expected - more women than he show more knows how to handle. A medical graduate with grand plans for the hormone of darkness, he finds his life is spiralling way out of control. show less

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6 reviews
I bought this book because the title references one of my favourite songs, and then it sat on my "to read" shelf for a very long time for the self-same reason. The Go-Betweens reference, I felt, might not auger well. This could be a cringingly twee, poorly-composed, Australian indie music name dropping embarrassment. The fact that I had noticed that another of the author's novels is titled Perfect Skin, presumably with reference to the Lloyd Cole and the Commotions song, did not reassure me. It was only at the encouragement of my mate Celia, whose reading tastes are strikingly similar to my own, that I decided it was time to give Nick Earls a go.

And I'm so glad that I did! This is just my cup of tea and was a great antidote to Hannah show more Kent's Burial Rites which, while also excellent in entirely different ways, is nothing if not grim.

The only warning I would give is that you have to have a pretty dry sense of humour to appreciate the thread of hilarity that weaves its way through this meandering tale. I have noticed quite a few readers saying "Was that supposed to be funny?" and while I was personally left in no doubt on that score, bursting into guffaws in public places on a regular basis during the reading process, I can kind of see that it just wouldn't register on some people's humour radar.

Also, I've said "meandering tale", and that needs to be taken as a gentle warning that if you want/need a traditional plot, with the usual beginning, middle, end/boy meets girl, loses girl, gets girl back again type thing... well, perhaps you'd better give this a miss. It's not like that. It's a highly amusing (as I said, if your brain works that way) journey through a period in the life of a 25-year-old medical registrar in late 1980s Brisbane who is really not at all sure what he wants in life.

Personally, I wouldn't have it any other way. And now, if you will excuse me, I'm off to listen to the Go-Betweens non-stop for some hours.
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½
What is it about lad lit? I usually love it in the beginning, then completely lose interest in the middle third. With this one, I didn't bother finishing it. I just didn't enjoy it. I loved the setting at the start. the insane detailing of a medical world was fascinating and strange. but it just plodded along with nothing happening. and shoot me for a fish, but I didn't think it was funny at all. If he's a genius at comedy like someone claimed, I'll have to tell you that my humour and his are so far incompatible it's right off the scale. It was a nice read. but funny, it was not (unless it picked up after i left them)
What is it about lad lit? I usually love it in the beginning, then completely lose interest in the middle third. With this one, I didn't bother finishing it. I just didn't enjoy it. I loved the setting at the start. the insane detailing of a medical world was fascinating and strange. but it just plodded along with nothing happening. and shoot me for a fish, but I didn't think it was funny at all. If he's a genius at comedy like someone claimed, I'll have to tell you that my humour and his are so far incompatible it's right off the scale. It was a nice read. but funny, it was not (unless it picked up after i left them)
It is the year of the Jon. He has found himself suddenly in demand by nurses and he stumbles across what could be an important medical discovery. How will his year pan out? An interesting and amusing book.
½
A novel about nothing that goes nowhere. Self-indulgent and limp, it's not even funny.

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43+ Works 1,783 Members
Nick Earls was born on October 8, 1963 in Newtownards, Northern Ireland. His family moved to Australia when he was nine. He earned a medical degree at the University of Queensland and practiced medicine before becoming a writer. He has written over 16 novels and short stories, along with poetry and articles for major newspapers. His most recent show more novel is Analogue Men. Word Hunter's trilogy is his first children's series. Wisdom Tree is his novella series which features one new novella a month for five months (May-September 2016). His awards include the Betty Trask Award in 1998 for his novel Zigzag. His young adult novel 48 Shades of Brown won the Children's Book Council of Australia Book of the Year for older readers in 2000 and was adapted into a film. Perfect Skin was also adapted into a film. Five of his novels were adapted into plays. He won the 2016 Speech Pathology Australia Book of the Year Award, Eight to 10 years for his book New Boy. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1998
People/Characters
Jon Marshall
Important places
Australia; Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; Queensland, Australia
Original language
English

Classifications

Genres
General Fiction, Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
823.914Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991945-1999
LCC
PR9639.3 .E27 .B33Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish LiteratureEnglish literature: Provincial, local, etc.

Statistics

Members
157
Popularity
207,927
Reviews
6
Rating
½ (3.52)
Languages
English, German
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
11
ASINs
2