My Most Excellent Year, Steve Kluger
My Most Excellent Year, Steve Kluger
List: $25.00 | Sale: $17.50
Club: $12.50

My Most Excellent Year
A Novel of Love, Mary Poppins, and Fenway Park

Author: Steve Kluger

Narrator: Eileen Stevens, Ben Rameka, Jeremy Beck

Unabridged: 8 hr 34 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 03/26/2019


Synopsis

Best friends and unofficial brothers since they were six, ninth-graders T.C. and Augie have got the world figured out. But that all changes when both friends fall in love for the first time. Enter Alé. She's pretty, sassy, and on her way to Harvard. T.C. falls hard, but Alé is playing hard to get. Meanwhile, Augie realizes that he's got a crush on a boy. It's not so clear to him, but to his family and friends, it's totally obvious! Told in alternating perspectives, this is the hilarious and touching story of their most excellent year, where these three friends discover love, themselves, and how a little magic and Mary Poppins can go a long way.

Author Bio

Steve Kluger shook hands with Lucille Ball when he was twelve. He's since lived a few more decades, but nothing much registered after that.

He is a novelist and playwright who grew up during the Sixties with only two heroes: Tom Seaver and
Ethel Merman. Few were able to grasp the concept. A veteran of Casablanca and a graduate of The Graduate, he has written extensively on subjects as far-ranging as World War II, rock and roll, and the Titanic, and as close to the heart as baseball and the Boston Red Sox (which frequently have nothing to do with one another). Doubtless due to the fact that he's a card-carrying Baby Boomer whose entire existence was shaped by the lyrics to Abbey Road, Workingman's Dead, and Annie Get Your Gun (his first spoken words, in fact, were actually stolen from The Pajama Game), he's also forged a somewhat singular path as a civil rights advocate, campaigning for a "Save Fenway Park" initiative (which qualifies as a civil right if you're a Red Sox fan), counseling gay teenagers, and-on behalf of Japanese American internment redress-lobbying the Department of the Interior to restore the baseball diamond at the Manzanar National Historic Site. Meanwhile, he's donated half of his spare time to organizations such as Lambda Legal, GLSEN, and Models of Pride, and gives the rest of it to his nephews and nieces: Emily, Noah, Bridgette, Audrey, Elisa, Paloma Logan, Evan, and Robbie-the nine kids who own his heart.

He lives in Boston, Massachusetts-the only city in the world.

Reviews