Current:Home > FinanceSusanna Hoffs' 'This Bird Has Flown' is a love story — and a valentine to music -PrimeWealth Guides
Susanna Hoffs' 'This Bird Has Flown' is a love story — and a valentine to music
View
Date:2025-04-16 16:17:12
Jane Start's life is all over the place.
The musician was once a star, albeit a brief one — she scored a hit single with "Can't You See I Want You," a cover of a song by a pop star named Jonesy. But in the 10 years that have passed since then, our hero has taken a fall: "I was living with my parents again, which at thirty-three was a demoralizing last resort," she says, bemoaning her new life with all of her possessions in four garbage bags, sitting near her "sagging twin bed."
Jane is the charming, funny, but unlucky protagonist of This Bird Has Flown, the debut novel from Susanna Hoffs, the singer and guitarist who rose to fame with the Bangles in the 1980s. It's a smart romantic comedy that proves that Hoffs' immense writing talent isn't just confined to songs.
As the novel opens, Jane is preparing for a gig in Las Vegas. She's not exactly thrilled to be playing a private party, but she chooses to look at the bright side: "The pay tonight would mean a deposit on an apartment, and a few months' rent, a chance to make another artsy record, even if no one bothered to listen to it. It would matter to me. If I could ever write another song again, that is."
She shows up for the performance "wearing a tiny scrap of fabric posing as a dress, half-hidden beneath my ex-boyfriend's vintage cardigan, the one possession I'd pinched, for sentimental reasons, when he'd left me for a twenty-three-year-old lingerie model. Two months ago." Her longtime friend and manager, Pippa, has some bad news for her: She's only going to play one song (her sole hit) to the audience full of "rowdy frat-bro types," and it will be accompanied by a karaoke track. And she's expected to sing in a hot pink wig.
After the show, Pippa insists that Jane fly to London with her, a chance to regroup and write some new songs. Pippa ends up unable to make the flight, which turns out to be a bit of kismet — Jane finds herself seated next to an Oxford literature professor named Tom Hardy. The two chat about books and music over the course of the long flight and Jane, unable to resist the handsome academic, impulsively kisses him.
Jane spends several days in London, pining for the one she thinks might have gotten away, until she finally gets a text message from him, asking her to visit him in Oxford. She does, and the two hit it off — so much so that she essentially moves in with him, accompanying him to events at his university, and befriending some of his colleagues.
She also gets some exciting career news: Jonesy, the author of her one hit, wants her to play with him at a special show at Royal Albert Hall. Jane isn't sure she wants to go through with it; she's been afflicted with stage fright for most of her career. And she's growing used to the idea of living with her new eternal flame, far from the spotlight: "Could it be the life I wanted was the one in England, with Tom? To write, record, perform in small venues — a folk singer's life?" But things get complicated with Tom — Jane learns that he's got a secret, one that causes her to see him in a different light.
Novels like This Bird Has Flown succeed or fail on the strength of their protagonists, and Jane is an unforgettable one. She's refreshingly three-dimensional, aware of her own faults, frustrated over the difficult time she has getting over her ex-boyfriend. She's self-deprecating, but knows she's talented; Hoffs never makes her the butt of jokes. The reader sees her as a friend, not an object of pity, which is crucial to the novel's success.
Tom, too, is a fully fleshed character, not the kind of stock love interest that Hugh Grant might have played in a 1990s movie. The relationship between the two is unforced and natural, and their dialogue together never descends into the too-cute-by-half banter that sometimes marks contemporary love stories.
This novel is a comedy, and Hoffs is a tremendously funny author; she writes with an amused gentleness that syncs perfectly with Jane's frenetic, somewhat anxious personality. And she nails the setting — London and Oxford turn into characters in the story, and Hoffs writes about them with real affection.
This Bird Has Flown is a love story, a sweet and tender romance, but not just one between Jane and Tom — it's Hoffs' valentine to music. (It's no surprise that she titled the book after a song by her beloved Beatles.) "I'd never yearned for the spotlight, only the music, only to strive to give others what music has unwaveringly given to me," Jane thinks at one point. "An outpouring of love, of expression, of connection." That's just what this novel is, and it's an absolutely beautiful outpouring.
veryGood! (418)
Related
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
- Rescued baby walrus getting round-the-clock cuddles as part of care regimen dies in Alaska
- 3-year-old migrant girl dies aboard bus headed from Texas to Chicago
- Barbie bonanza: 'Barbie' tops box office for fourth week straight with $33.7 M
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- 3 Maryland vacationers killed and 3 more hurt in house fire in North Carolina’s Outer Banks
- Pilot and crew member safely eject before Soviet-era fighter jet crashes at Michigan air show
- They were alone in a fight to survive. Maui residents had moments to make life-or-death choices
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- Why Millie Bobby Brown Is Ready to Move on From Stranger Things
Ranking
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- A history of Hawaii's sirens and the difference it could have made against Maui fires
- Chicago mayor to introduce the police department’s counterterrorism head as new superintendent
- At least 20 Syrian soldiers killed in ISIS bus ambush, activists say
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- Kendall Jenner and Bad Bunny Pack on the PDA at Drake Concert in L.A.
- Freed U.S. nurse says Christian song was her rallying cry after she was kidnapped in Haiti
- Philadelphia Eagles LB Shaun Bradley to miss 2023 season after injury in preseason opener
Recommendation
McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
How to get rid of pimples: Acne affects many people. Here's what to do about it.
Jonas Brothers setlist: Here are all the songs on their lively The Tour
The best horror movies of 2023 so far, ranked (from 'Scream VI' to 'Talk to Me')
Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
Highest-paid QBs in the NFL: The salaries for the 42 highest paid NFL quarterbacks
Horoscopes Today, August 13, 2023
Custard shop that survived COVID and car crashes finds sweet success on Instagram