Curtis
is no longer a rock star. His dad is dead, he
has no wife and his life is a mess
DESCRIPTION OF BOOK
“I'm not about to attack,' she said. She smirked
with one side of her mouth and looked up at me
through the black spray of her fringe. Her eyes
were dark and already she was playing some kind
of game with me, or that's how it seemed. Her
voice was a little deeper and huskier than I
might have expected, so her last line had come
out with a hint of something that might have
been menace or even seductiveness or just a
pitch at adult banter. Whatever it was, it stuck
with me and it punctuated the moment and it
didn't feel quite right for a conversation with
a schoolgirl on my doorstep.”
With his chart-topping band, Butterfish, Curtis
Holland lived the clichéd rock dream. Residing
in hotels and recording studios, travelling in
custom-built buses, he got married after a
soundcheck in a wedding chapel in Nevada and
barely noticed when his wife left him in
Louisville.
But no dream lasts forever.
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. He's back in
Brisbane trying to build a life and he is 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 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.
Filled with acute observation, humour and
tenderness, Butterfish is Nick Earls at his very
best.