Cover Art: Ruben de Vela
Print Length: 55 pages
A nameless young man is watching his dreams slip away when a man who let his own dreams die long ago sits down and begins to tell him a story: a story of young love and teenage dreams and rock and roll magic. A story about being young and being brave, and the girl who taught him how to be that way.
As the story unfolds, the young man begins to wonder if there's something more to this older man and his strange story...if maybe, just maybe, rock and roll magic is real.
A modern-day fable, The Truth of Rock and Roll is a cautionary tale about being young, being brave, and holding onto your dreams.
Character Fun Facts
- Jenny was twelve before her family got a TV – they were one of the last families in town to do so. Radio (and records, of course) are still her primary form of entertainment.
- Once they do get a TV, her favorite show is, of course, American Bandstand. She would have loved the early days of MTV.
- In contrast, Johnny’s family was one of the first to get a TV. Got to keep up with the Joneses…or better yet, get ahead of them.
- Jenny likes to stay up late with her portable transistor radio and try to get reception for radio shows from the cities.
- One interest that Jenny and Johnny share is movies; many of their dates involve trips to the nearest city to catch a flick. Jenny’s favorites are beach movies, biker movies, and (though she would never admit it to anyone but Johnny) musicals – basically anything where people ride off into the sunset and live happily ever after. She’d love the chance, if she ever got to The Big City, to see one of those experimental student films she’s heard about. Johnny’s favorites are creature features and Hammer horror films. They like each other’s favorites well enough that they rarely disagree on what to see, and they have common ground with science fiction. Neither of them like Westerns.
- Johnny’s father not only has a hand in the till, he has a woman on the side. Johnny’s mother knows this, and it’s not that she doesn’t care, but it’s what she’s come to expect from their class in their time and place. If she hadn’t married him for the money in the first place, it might hurt more.
- Johnny’s parents gave him a Mustang for his sixteenth birthday. He was extremely grateful, and eagerly drove it all over town to show it off. He didn’t realize until years later that they had done that because their neighbors had bought their son a Pontiac Firebird for his birthday earlier that same year. Got to keep up with the Joneses.
- Other avatars in Rock and Roll Heaven include the Dancing Queen (aka The Queen of the Bop), The Bitch Princess, The Boy With the Hot Car, The Lonely Girl (and The Coolest Boy In School, who rescues her from her loneliness…over and over again…forever…), The Lovers Beyond Death and The Broken Hearted.
- Though the Grey Man never realized it, one of the performers that he and Jenny saw on their one night in New York City was Patti Smith.
- I don’t want to give away anything about the narrator, but one thing you should know is that his plans weren’t particularly impractical. If – for example – he wanted to go to film school, it wasn’t for that one-in-a-million shot as an actor; he’d want to be a special effects technician or a cameraman. It’s just that his father considers anything other than an MBA to be “majoring in poverty”.
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