The True Story of Butterfish

by Nick Earls

On This Page

Description

When Annaliese Winter walks down Curtis Holland's front path, he's ill-prepared for a sixteen-year-old schoolgirl who's a confounding mixture of adult and child. After years travelling the world with his band, Butterfish, he's not used to having a neighbour at all. So when Curtis receives an invitation to dinner from Annaliese's mother, Kate, he is surprised when he not only accepts but finds himself being drawn to this remarkably unremarkable family. Even to fifteen-year-old Mark who is at show more war with his own surging adolescence. Curtis soon realises that with Kate divorced, Annaliese and Mark need a male role model in their lives, but it's hard for him to help when he's just starting to grow up himself and harder still when Annaliese begins to show an interest in him that is less than filial. show less

Tags

Recommendations

Member Reviews

3 reviews
Curtis one half of the international music sensation Butterfish has moved back to his home town in Queensland after the split of the band. While trying to live a normal life he becomes entangled with the lives of his neighbours: a mother who can’t cook; her dramatic 16-year-old daughter and her quintessential 14-year-old son. Nick Earls fills his characters with quirks and mannerisms that the reader can identify in some way with every one of them. Earls’ effortless prose and humour makes easy reading but the way that he handles complicated scenarios makes the book unforgettable.
I don't really know how to describe this book. An episode in the protagonist's life? It seemed not to come to any resolution, but not to have anything terribly deep either.

Curtin is a musician, ex member of Savage Ga- no sorry, Butterfish, returning home after his band splits after a lacklustre third album. I'm still not sure what Curtis played- keyboards maybe? Anyway, he has to deal with his neighbour and her daughter's attentions, the neighbour's son's fish loving, his dad's death oh and, the lead singer of Butterfish descending on him. Although the arrival of Derek sends Curtis into a tizzy, not a lot seems to come out of this (nor from the neighbours).

I borrowed this from the library. If I'd have bought it, I would have been show more disappointed with the lack of resolution. Nick Earls writes very well, but not even nostalgic love for Australia could put this high on my shelves. Bachelor Kisses is much more humourous and the plot actually moves- I'd recommend this instead, show less
½
Curtis is a "retired" rock star who returns to his native Brisbane after the band he was in imploded. He is discovering a normal life again and his place as he re-establishes a relationship with his brother, gets caught up in the lives of his single mother neighbour and her two teenage children and has to resolve some issues about an ex band member and the marriage of his ex wife.

Members

Recently Added By

Published Reviews

ThingScore 75
Earls' characters are superb, and the conversations in which they make furtive, toe-stubbing attempts to connect with each another are hilariously rich in the unsaid and the unintended. And while Curtis' low-key style can sometimes be unaffected to the point of homespun, the prose is also capable of artful shades of feeling, especially in the passages about the missing parents who haunt this show more story, and in some memorable descriptions of songs and singers, and the reasons we need music in the first place. show less
Thornton McCamish, The Age
Jul 20, 2009
added by Shortride

Author Information

Picture of author.
43+ Works 1,784 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

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The True Story of Butterfish
Original publication date
2009
People/Characters
Curtis Holland; Annaliese Winter; Kate Winter; Mark Winter
Important places
Australia; Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; Queensland, Australia
First words
I was still on my guard back then, when Annaliese Winter came up my driveway in her school uniform with questions to ask about her missing dog.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
823.914Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991945-1999
LCC
PR9619.3 .E22 .T78Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish LiteratureEnglish literature: Provincial, local, etc.
BISAC

Statistics

Members
69
Popularity
453,568
Reviews
3
Rating
(3.22)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
13
UPCs
1