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Just Say No! by Omar Tyree β€” book cover
Fiction, General

Just Say No!

by Omar Tyree
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Synopsis

Best friends Darin Harmon and John Williams breeze through high school and, in a homecoming talent show during their sophomore year at college, John launches his big-time R&B career. John -- now "Loverboy" -- asks Darin to be his manager, and to share the money, celebrity lifestyle, fast women, and recreational drugs.

Publishers Weekly

The pitfalls of success swallow up a young soul singer in Tyree's latest, a buddy story about a pair of African-Americans from North Carolina who rocket to stardom together after leaving college to enter the music business. Darin Harmon is the narrator, a college football prospect who sees his career go up in smoke after an injury and decides to manage his best friend, a talented singer and musician named John Williams. Williams comes from a church music background, but when he starts singing and writing songs, the romantic "Loverboy" persona he invents quickly lands him a record deal, a concert tour and a series of bestselling singles and albums. Williams can't resist temptation, though, and his problems start with pot addiction and slowly progress to include increasingly dangerous sexual adventures, leaving Harmon with the dubious task of trying to keep his best friend's hedonism under the media radar. Eventually Harmon tires of Williams's antics, and when he quits to get married, raise a family and become a producer, the pace of Loverboy's slide accelerates until he finally lands in a Maryland halfway house after a drug arrest. Tyree narrates the somewhat predictable story at a slick, superficial level, relying on at least a dozen rather redundant sex scenes to keep the plot moving, although he does delve briefly into Williams's troubled relationship with his extremely religious but hypocritical mother. The sex, drugs and rock-and-roll angle will seem familiar to white readers, but Tyree's major contribution here is framing Williams' efforts in the context of other soul, rap and R&B artists to produce an informative and entertaining variation on a formulaic music yarn. (Aug.) Forecast:Tyree's books are tried-and-true crowd-pleasers, and the music-themed plot of his latest a Black Expressions main selection and a Literary Guild, Doubleday and Quality Paperback alternate selection should attract an even larger audience than usual. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

About the Author, Omar Tyree

New York Times bestselling author Omar Tyree is the winner of the 2001 NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Literary Work — Fiction, and of the 2006 Phillis Wheatley Literary Award for Body of Work in Urban Fiction. His books include Boss Lady, Diary of a Groupie, Leslie, Just Say No!, For the Love of Money, Sweet St. Louis, Single Mom, A Do Right Man, and Flyy Girl. He lives in Charlotte, North Carolina. To learn more about Omar Tyree, visit his website at www.omartyree.com.

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Book Details

Published
June 1, 2002
Publisher
Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780684872940

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