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The Best of Adam Sharp

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'Oscillates between profound emotional depths and absolute hilarity...So much fun!' Toni Collette

A novel about love, music and coming to terms with the past, from the author of the international bestseller The Rosie Project.

On the cusp of fifty, Adam Sharp has a loyal partner, earns a good income as an IT contractor and is the music-trivia expert at quiz nights. It's the lifestyle he wanted, but something's missing.

Two decades ago, on the other side of the world, his part-time piano playing led him into a passionate relationship with Angelina Brown, who'd abandoned law studies to pursue her acting dream. She gave Adam a chance to make it something more than an affair—but he didn't take it. And now he can't shake off his nostalgia for what might have been.

Then, out of nowhere, Angelina gets in touch. What does she want? Does Adam dare to live dangerously? How far will he go for a second chance?

Graeme Simsion is a Melbourne-based novelist and screenwriter. The Rosie Project and The Rosie Effect have combined global sales approaching five million copies. Graeme is also the author of the international bestsellers The Best of Adam Sharp and – co-written with his wife, Anne Buist – Two Steps Forward. His screenplay for The Rosie Project is in development with Sony Pictures, The Best of Adam Sharp is in development with Toni Collette's Vocab Films, and the rights to Two Steps Forward have been optioned by Fox Searchlight and Ellen DeGeneres. Graeme's latest book is the third and final Rosie novel, The Rosie Result.

'[A] poignant glimpse into human relationships—what it is to love and to be loved...The Best of Adam Sharp hits you right in the morals and leaves you thinking—how far would you go for a second chance?' Books+Publishing

'How does Graeme Simsion follow-up his dual smash-hits of The Rosie Project and The Rosie Effect? By penning a novel that is just as funny and poignant, but with a tumultuous moral core...it will resonate long after you've closed the book.' Pages & Pages Booksellers

'The Best of Adam Sharp is a novel that asks important questions, and is as moving as it is entertaining.' Booklover Book Reviews

'It's terrific to have Simsion back at it and this time he's educating readers on all things musical with an accompanying playlist to boot. Very clever stuff.' Angus & Robertson Bookworld

'The Best of Adam Sharp is a book about regret, about not taking the chances that life deals you and how those failures end up wearing away at you. It's a hugely romantic tale, and some of it quite lovely and moving; some of it is funny and unsettling.' Daily Review 

'I love Graeme's wit.' Vanessa Little, Libraries ACT Director, Sydney Morning Herald

'Extremely entertaining and funny, and very perceptive on various aspects of life...A thoughtful but very funny look at a mid-life crisis.' Clothes in Books

'A great read—romantic, wry and well-written in that bookish David Nicholls-ish way. And totally rock'n'roll: Bob Dylan and Patti Smith fans will love all the references.' Daily Mail

'What seems like a run-of-the-mill chick-lit tale about "the one that got away" becomes a complicated exploration of marriage, what it means to love someone, and how life gets in the way.' Publishers Weekly

'A fun, sweet ride.' Washington Post

'There's something I really enjoy about Simsion's writing. He's able to invoke a warmth or sense of...

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 6, 2017
      In Simsion’s third novel (after The Rosie Effect), an email from an old flame, Angelina Brown, spurs British computer guy Adam Sharp to reassess what he wants from life. Though their affair was short-lived and over two decades before, Adam still believes Angelina is his soul mate. He’s been involved with Claire for decades, but their relationship is mostly practical, and a business deal might require her to move from England to the U.S. Email flirtations with Angelina escalate into Skype conversations and culminate in an invitation to join Angelina and her affable husband, Charlie, at their vacation house in France. At this point, Sharp’s book takes an unexpected turn. What seems like a run-of-the-mill chick-lit tale about “the one that got away” becomes a complicated exploration of marriage, what it means to love someone, and how life gets in the way. Adam propels himself into this situation assuming he knows how things are going to play out. Charlie turns out to be more than his amiable, accommodating first impression would indicate, and Angelina shows facets of herself that are a touch more complicated than the girl-of-Adam’s-dreams trope. The contrast almost makes this feel like two different novels. The story winds down with a great passive-aggressive song trivia contest, and Simsion delivers an ending that feels hard-won and true, though readers will have to tough out getting there with a little patience.

    • Books+Publishing

      July 8, 2016
      This new offering from The Rosie Project’s Graeme Simsion is another poignant glimpse into human relationships—what it is to love and to be loved. Adam Sharp, a 40-something database architect, is content. He lives in the UK with a wife he loves (when he sees her), regularly attends pub trivia nights with his mates, and has his music. Out of the blue, Adam’s Great Lost Love, Angelina, contacts him, and with a single ‘hi’ brings his world grinding to a halt. His memories of their short time together in Melbourne in the 1980s reveal a brief but intense love affair, but why is Angelina contacting now? What kind of couple could they have become? Can they be that now? Readers looking for the same laugh-out-loud schadenfreude or viscerally discomforting social awkwardness of Simsion’s ‘Rosie’ books won’t find it in The Best of Adam Sharp, where Adam’s ‘what if?’ ponderings feel more confusing and frustrating. The story is littered with references to some brilliant songs from the 1960s and 1970s, and Simsion includes a playlist for readers to listen to while reading. While not as funny as Simsion’s first novels, The Best of Adam Sharp hits you right in the morals and leaves you thinking—how far would you go for a second chance? Louise Fay is the special orders manager at Dymocks Adelaide

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