The John Lennon Affair
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- £2.49
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- £2.49
Publisher Description
“Wonderful dialog, great plotting, plentiful Hollywood tidbits, and literate prose; strongly recommended.”—Library Journal
“The first two series entries were fast-paced adventures. Without discarding that ‘Thin Man’ mood, Levinson has crafted a richer and more poignant novel.”—Los Angeles Times.
IMAGINE THIS—The truth is in the fiction as Robert S. Levinson draws on his personal experience at the highest levels of the music industry and with many people closest to John Lennon and the Beatles to weave a nerve-jangling thriller that puts the reader in the heart of the action.
IMAGINE THIS—Manhattan. December 8, 1980—A crazed fan steps out of the shadows of the Dakota apartment building across from Central Park and shoots murders John Lennon. Young Neil Gulliver, then an aggressive reporter with a small California newspaper, races to New York, falls in with two of John Lennon’s closest mates, and begins relationships that will tie him irrevocably to the secret world inside rock-and-roll. .
IMAGINE THIS—Los Angeles. Years later—After Gulliver, now a respected newspaper columnist, and his ex-wife, actress Stevie Marriner, agree to appear at a star-studded Imagine That! music festival honoring the iconic ex-Beatle, they find themselves the targets of one murder attempt after another. Why? And why are so many other people once associated with Lennon dying violent deaths? It becomes impossible to tell the good guys from the bad guys or if, in fact, there is a difference between them.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Levinson's long experience in music public relations, the handling of rock stars, and writing and producing has provided him with material and styles enough for three novels, but not enough of substance for any one novel. Following hot on the heels of The James Dean Affair and The Elvis and Marilyn Affair, his latest eulogizes the murdered Beatle, the story split between Lennon's own time and a huge, mob-inspired John Lennon Imagine That! Memorial Rock Festival in 2001. Making their third appearance are Levinson's series protagonists, newspaperman Neil Gulliver and TV actress Stevie Marriner, known as the "Sex Queen of the Soaps." Gulliver covered Lennon's death, and now he and Stevie find themselves appearing in the massive festival in his honor. Someone doesn't want them around, though, and will kill to keep them away. Ironically, among the parade of stock supporting characters crooks, assassins, drunken Indians, politicians, actors, sinister Treasury agents and "Feebies" (FBI agents) Lennon himself is only peripheral. He is given occasional lines, once at an earlier festival: "They have a bloody foogin' concert in me honor to raise money to wipe out weapons, and it brings on one gun going off after the bleeding next." It may be news that Mark David Chapman, who shot him, had been hired to shoot President-elect "Dutch" Reagan instead. Enough names are dropped to fill an agent's Rolodex (including those in a lengthy author's note), and gags abound, but more attention to plot would have been helpful for the bewildered reader. Readers who pick this up hoping for all Beatles all the time will be disappointed what they'll get is a mediocre mystery with the musician as hook and the rock scene as background d cor.