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The Best of Adam Sharp

A Novel

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

From the bestselling author of The Rosie Project comes a romantic novel about true love, second chances, and decades of great music.
Two decades ago, Adam Sharp's piano playing led him into a passionate relationship with Angelina Brown, an intelligent and strong-willed actress. They had a chance at something more—but Adam didn't take it.
Now, on the cusp of turning fifty, Adam likes his life. He's happy with his partner Claire, he excels in music trivia at quiz night at the local pub, he looks after his mother, and he does the occasional consulting job in IT. But he can never quite shake off his nostalgia for what might have been. And then, out of nowhere, from the other side of the world, Angelina gets in touch. What does she want? Does Adam dare to live dangerously?
Set to the soundtrack of our lives, The Best of Adam Sharp by Graeme Simsion follows along with emotion and humor as one man looks back on his past and decides if having a second chance is worth the risk.
One of Glamour Magazine's "Most Anticipated Books of 2017"

  • "20 Must-Read Books for Spring 2017" from Redbook
    Praise for The Best of Adam Sharp:
    "This dazzling story about a former pianist who has a second chance in midlife with his former actress flame will do some major heart-warming this Spring — and readers will never foresee the incredible ending." —POPSUGAR
    "It's a fun sweet ride." —The Washington Post

    "Readers are already clamoring." —Library Journal
    "An extraordinary literary treat that reminds readers the best things in life have nothing to do with plans." —Redbook

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      • Publisher's Weekly

        March 6, 2017
        In Simsion’s third novel (after The Rosie Effect), an email from an old flame, Angelina Brown, spurs British computer guy Adam Sharp to reassess what he wants from life. Though their affair was short-lived and over two decades before, Adam still believes Angelina is his soul mate. He’s been involved with Claire for decades, but their relationship is mostly practical, and a business deal might require her to move from England to the U.S. Email flirtations with Angelina escalate into Skype conversations and culminate in an invitation to join Angelina and her affable husband, Charlie, at their vacation house in France. At this point, Sharp’s book takes an unexpected turn. What seems like a run-of-the-mill chick-lit tale about “the one that got away” becomes a complicated exploration of marriage, what it means to love someone, and how life gets in the way. Adam propels himself into this situation assuming he knows how things are going to play out. Charlie turns out to be more than his amiable, accommodating first impression would indicate, and Angelina shows facets of herself that are a touch more complicated than the girl-of-Adam’s-dreams trope. The contrast almost makes this feel like two different novels. The story winds down with a great passive-aggressive song trivia contest, and Simsion delivers an ending that feels hard-won and true, though readers will have to tough out getting there with a little patience.

      • AudioFile Magazine
        Here we have a wistful audiobook about a musician who had his chance at the top, gave it up, and is now living a good life in an English town. And then the woman who offered him the chance at stardom comes back into his life. What fun. Narrator David Barker has a deep, English-accented voice that's, well, full of wist. He paces the audiobook superbly and dabbles in some character voices that move the story along. Barker is eminently understandable, and he pronounces every word clearly. But it's the wistfulness that slightly gets in the way. Just when Barker becomes more enthusiastic, he slides back into a slower pace. A little more consistent energy would make this audiobook even better than it is. R.I.G. © AudioFile 2017, Portland, Maine
      • Library Journal

        May 15, 2017

        Simsion (The Rosie Project) here tells the story of Adam, a part-time musician who 20-plus years ago fell in love and then walked away. Now, the pair reunite and have to decide if they want to take a second chance. Typically this type of story is told from the woman's perspective; hearing the story from Adam's point of view saves it from being a run-of-the-mill tale. There is a quite unbelievable love triangle in the last half of the book, but it is not enough to make listeners walk away. Another interesting element addresses the relationship we have with music and how songs and lyrics are such powerful reminders of various times in our lives. David Barker provides excellent narration with Australian, New Zealand, and British accents. VERDICT Overall, a thought-provoking story, for fans of Fredrik Backman or Ann Patchett. ["A bittersweet read for fans of Simsion's previous works": LJ 2/15/17 review of the St. Martin's hc.]--Donna Bachowski, Orange Cty. Lib. Syst., Orlando, FL

        Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

      • Books+Publishing

        July 8, 2016
        This new offering from The Rosie Project’s Graeme Simsion is another poignant glimpse into human relationships—what it is to love and to be loved. Adam Sharp, a 40-something database architect, is content. He lives in the UK with a wife he loves (when he sees her), regularly attends pub trivia nights with his mates, and has his music. Out of the blue, Adam’s Great Lost Love, Angelina, contacts him, and with a single ‘hi’ brings his world grinding to a halt. His memories of their short time together in Melbourne in the 1980s reveal a brief but intense love affair, but why is Angelina contacting now? What kind of couple could they have become? Can they be that now? Readers looking for the same laugh-out-loud schadenfreude or viscerally discomforting social awkwardness of Simsion’s ‘Rosie’ books won’t find it in The Best of Adam Sharp, where Adam’s ‘what if?’ ponderings feel more confusing and frustrating. The story is littered with references to some brilliant songs from the 1960s and 1970s, and Simsion includes a playlist for readers to listen to while reading. While not as funny as Simsion’s first novels, The Best of Adam Sharp hits you right in the morals and leaves you thinking—how far would you go for a second chance? Louise Fay is the special orders manager at Dymocks Adelaide

    Formats

    • OverDrive Listen audiobook

    Languages

    • English

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