Let's Fly
by Giles Fraser
This title was previously available on NetGalley and is now archived.
Send NetGalley books directly to your Kindle or Kindle app
1
To read on a Kindle or Kindle app, please add kindle@netgalley.com as an approved email address to receive files in your Amazon account. Click here for step-by-step instructions.
2
Also find your Kindle email address within your Amazon account, and enter it here.
Pub Date 28 May 2021 | Archive Date 22 Jun 2021
Talking about this book? Use #LetsFly #NetGalley. More hashtag tips!
Description
How do you survive when a lucky break turns out to be the worst thing that ever happened to you?
Nick Hunter is about to find out. He made a colossal mistake when he was barely out of school and now his whole world is in jeopardy as he races against the clock to save his family and his business from disaster.
In 1979 Hunter heads to London, and a squat in Notting Hill, with dreams of musical success. With his fellow squatters he forms a band and they record four short songs before tensions and misunderstandings drive them apart. Nick lies and tells the record company the songs are all his own work. Six years later one of the songs, Let’s Fly, is picked as the soundtrack to a blockbuster movie and Nick makes a fortune in royalties.
In 2017, Nick, his wife Sam and daughter Jen now live in the house opposite his old squat. His successful gig economy, online food business is about to go public, but someone is on his back. Nick is in massive debt and the heavies are closing in. Disasters are befalling the business just at the wrong time. Then Sam is snatched and, with a price on her head, Nick must come up with the money or lose her. With his life and family on the line – and just days to play with - Nick has to stop whoever is destroying his life and come clean with those he loves in order to hang on to everything he holds dear.
A Note From the Publisher
Available Editions
EDITION | Ebook |
ISBN | 9781800469327 |
PRICE | US$4.99 (USD) |
PAGES | 200 |
Featured Reviews
How do you survive when a lucky break turns out to be the worst thing that ever happened to you?
I enjoyed Nick Hunter's character. This story line usually isn't my favorite but as I kept reading it kept getting better and better! The story is so unique and good!not had me turning the pages with such force my Kindle kept freezing..... LoL
Really enjoyed reading this ebook copy. NetGalley, Matador and Fraser for this intense ebook copy!
This was OK.
It's about a young lad who formed a band, wrote a song, song gets picked out for a movie soundtrack, makes a ton of money. Unfortunately the band splits after youth, naievity and love triangles get in the way of friendship etc. Our hero, Nick, does try and contact the others to share the money but they don't want to know. I never quite got why, because he didn't really do anything outside of youthful ignorance to deserve being stonewalled, but I guess the others were young too, so sulks and grudges and angst etc. Anyway, Nick matures a little and sets up a business - and we're told numberous times he 'built the business' - and makes a success of it, marries, has a daughter.
The past catches up with Nick as it is wont to do with all of us. The reader is kept guessing what it is that Nick has done which causes him so much grief and, not wanting to give away spoilers, I won't reveal it here. But I wasn't entirely convinced that A, any reasonably intelligent guy would have got himself into that situation, and B, he'd have allowed it to go on so long.
Parts of the story also made no sense. I never quite got Luke's motivations for what he wanted done with his share of the money, and certainly why he never told Trish or his boy come to that. Bit spiteful not to. And, as it turned out, caused all sorts of unnecessary grief for people he claimed to love as well as those he supposedly disliked.
I'm also afraid the action scenes were a little overcooked for me. They didn't fit with the vibe of the book. I mean, for the most part of this book I was reading a very readable coming of age about loves and friendships, and to throw in a few violent moments doesn't turn the book into a thriller, at least it didn't for me. A clumsy fistfight or two is one thing, but any more than that and the feel of the book gets dislodged and suddenly it's like the odd violent scene has been shoehorned in from a different story for the sake of adding drama.
So, whilst this book is very readable with an ok storyline, it felt a little unpolished and the characters a little jagged around the edges. I never felt I knew any of them well enough to like or dislike. I didn't trust them. It's not going to stop me picking up another book by this author, because his writing style is clear and easy and with a more solid and consistent story it will be a book I'd look forward to.
Thanks to Matador and Netgalley for the ARC.