

Coy’s voice is strong and sure he captures Neil’s voice and tone with specificity and confidence. In the process of hanging out and working with Sedgwick, Neil makes a discovery about the soon-to-be-legendary musician that sets his perspective spinning and provides Neil with insights he might have preferred to do without.

Neil’s life is upended, however, by the latest musical star in the Nashville firmament, Garrett Sedgwick, who hires Neil to design the cover art for his latest album. The circumstances of his move-new job, death in the family, freshly degreed from graduate school-left Neil somewhat dazed, but his life has settled into a groove of seeking out clients, attending concerts, and hanging out with a cadre of friends who deliver rueful, self-aware political manifestos.

Neil Oberlin, the novel’s narrator, is a graphic designer and music aficionado who has been in Nashville for a few years. Spot-on satire or earnest picture of youth in transition? That’s up to readers to decide with Coy’s debut novel about being young and part of the Nashville scene.
