<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>"In the doldrums of a career as a cult figure, Rudy has been overshadowed by Ryan Orland, to the point where Rudy is now identified as an imitator of the younger man. Ryan is generous and supportive, but Rudy finds it hard to be grateful, especially as a sordid confrontation results in their estrangement. When his sister's daughter, a teenage runaway, turns up asking to join him on the road, Rudy has to come to terms with the limits of his ambition and the nature of his obligation to family. Someone Should Pay for Your Pain is an exploration of the nature of creativity and popular success; artistic and ethical influence; the pathos of the middle-aged artist; changing standards of sexual morality; and guilt and penance in a post-religious society."--Provided by publisher.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><b><i>Someone Should Pay for Your Pain</i> by Franz Nicolay hits the backroads with singer-songwriter Rudy Pauver as he navigates a conflicted relationship with a successful protégé and the unexpected arrival of his spirited young niece.</b> <br></br> <p>In the doldrums of a career as a cult figure, Rudy has been overshadowed by Ryan Orland, to the point where Rudy is now identified as an imitator of the younger man. Ryan is generous and supportive, but Rudy finds it hard to be grateful, especially as a sordid confrontation results in their estrangement. When his sister's daughter, a teenage runaway, turns up asking to join him on the road, Rudy has to come to terms with the limits of his ambition and the nature of his obligation to family.</p> <p><i>Someone Should Pay for Your Pain</i> is an exploration of the nature of creativity and popular success; artistic and ethical influence; the pathos of the middle-aged artist; changing standards of sexual morality; and guilt and penance in a post-religious society.</p> <p>Reading group guide available to download from publisher's website.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>"[A] tight-fisted gut punch of a novel, weaving a road-weary world with a lyricist's skill for evocation, emotion, and economy. . . . A knockout fiction debut from a longtime troubadour." --Alex Houston, the Seminary Co-op, in 42 Great Books To Read This Spring, Recommended By Our Favorite Indie Booksellers, <i>BuzzFeed News </i> <br></br> "Through the blur of indifferent audiences and counterfeit drink tickets, Rudy becomes the de facto guardian of his crust punk niece and is forced to reckon with his broken relationship with a famous former protégé--a career-defining falling out where the holier-than-thou Pauver has always cast himself as the victim, though the truth is far more muddy. . . . Nicolay's pitch-perfect observations make his story intriguing and all too true, zooming by like trees on the side of the highway."--Chris L. Terry, Razorcake 3/17/21 <br></br> "I love this for novel for its sensitivity to the tenderness and absurdity of human after human, city after city, year after year. <i>Someone Should Pay for Your Pain</i> is a marvel, and when I finished it, my first emotion was to return to the opening pages and read it all over again." -- Rivka Galchen <br></br> "If you've been waiting for the great rock and roll novel look no further. Franz Nicolay's <i>Someone Should Pay for Your Pain</i> smashes Don Delillo's <i>Great Jones Street</i> against a chaste <i>Lolita.</i> Nicolay's book focuses on the illusion of stardom and the reality that most musicians play mainly in dingy clubs to sparse if passionate fans. Rudy, the book's hero, lays down insights into art making as well as the wide variety of hangovers all the while moving fitfully toward a great dilation of care. -- Darcey Steinke <br></br> "Wise, brutal and funny, <i>Someone Should Pay for Your Pain</i> is a bruising and beautiful glimpse of the endless tour of broken dreams some of us call life. But as Franz Nicolay shows in this stunning fiction debut, there is still hope. You just might have to fight yourself for it." -- Sam Lipsyte, author of <i>The Ask</i> and <i>Hark</i>. <br></br> "Franz Nicolay's poetic takedown of a musician's extended adolescence goes down smoother than a drink ticket beer. Read it before you get in the van." -- Chris L. Terry, author of the novels Black Card and Zero Fade <br></br> "Rudy Pauver is a middle-aged musician with mid-level talent, still out there on the road, still grinding, still trying, but he's not quite sure why. In this beautifully and brutally honest novel, Franz Nicolay challenges our romantic notions of freedom and the working artist's life. He crafts a story that any reader, mired in the daily disappointments of what their life was supposed to have been, can embrace." -- Cari Luna, author of <i>The Revolution of Every Day</i> <br></br> <i>Someone Should Pay for Your Pain</i> is a poignant and powerfully honest meditation on aging, art-making, and failure. With a sharp ear and an unsparing eye, Franz Nicolay has reinvented the road novel, stripping it of wide-eyed, Kerouac-ian grandeur to expose the frozen landscapes--both external and internal--that are part and parcel of a rootless existence. It's a book that will haunt me for a long time to come." -- Adam Wilson, author of Sensation Machines <br></br> "Nicolay's ear goes beyond music. There is confidence and grace in these pages, characters that feel pulled from daily life, none of their rough edges sanded down. A debut novel not just for artists, but anyone who's ever felt like they've grown up and distorted, uncomfortable moving through the world." --Jean Kyoung Frazier, author of <i>Pizza Girl</i> <br></br> "The life of an artist is really about giving. That's especially so for the musician. You give all of yourself to your art and it's likely you won't get much back in return. It's a tough world, but few can write about it as beautifully as Franz Nicolay. With <i>Someone Should Pay for Your Pain</i>, Nicolay gives us the sort of fully-realized, there's no going back kind of story that's hauntingly reminiscent of Denis Johnson, but filtered through the lens of somebody who has actually gotten in the van." -- Jason Diamond, author of <i>Searching for John Hughes</i> and <i>The Sprawl</i><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Franz Nicolay is a musician and writer, a member of The Hold Steady and other projects. His first book, <i>The Humorless Ladies of Border Control: Touring the Punk Underground from Belgrade to Ulaanbaatar, </i> was named a "Season's Best Travel Book" by the <i>New York Times.</i> <i>Someone Should Pay for Your Pain</i> is his first novel. He lives in in California's East Bay.
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