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The Holden Age of Hollywood

di Phil Brody

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Hollywood died on me as soon as I got here. Welles said that, not me, but damn if he didn’t nail it, you know? Sam Bateman came to Hollywood to settle a score, but amidst the sunny and 75, his plans went astray. Everything changed the day he drank in the intoxicating legend of Meyer Holden, the greatest screenwriter Hollywood has ever known, the one who pulled a Salinger and walked away. Holden now tacks pseudonyms onto his works and buries them in the bottomless sea of spec that is Hollywood’s development process. They’re out there for anyone to find--but at what cost? In his quest, Bateman severs all ties and sinks into a maddening world of bad writing and flawed screenplays. Paranoid and obsessive, the belligerent savant encounters an eccentric cast of characters--each with an agenda--in his search for the one writer in Hollywood who does not want to be found. Phil Brody’s The Holden Age of Hollywood is at once a detective novel, an unexpected love story, and a provocative expos#65533; of a broken industry. With dark humor and incisive commentary, the novel immerses readers in a neo-noir quest to attain the Hollywood dream, integrity intact.… (altro)
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What a great book! It's also an incredibly true testament to LA. I could definitely see this adapted into a movie, as long as Nick Offerman is cast as Meyer Holden. ( )
  Codonnelly | Jun 24, 2019 |
I really enjoyed this satirical look at modern day Hollywood. The author is trying to pound home the point that the writing in the movies of today is pretty lousy, a point of which I totally agree, and he writes a novel to illustrate the point.
When I first saw this title I assumed the Holden in the title was one of my favorite actors William Holden, but instead it referred to fictional screenwriter Meyer Holden, a one hit wonder, who walks away from the biz, and goes into seclusion. But he hasn't totally gone away, he floats his works out in the ocean of screenplays under pseudonyms waiting for them to be discovered. When one of them is and is turned into a giant moneymaker, the hunt is on for another diamond in the rough. ( )
  Iambookish | Dec 14, 2016 |
When Sam Bateman was going through his late father's effects, he discovered a whole treasure trove of screenplays. All had been declined by the same Hollywood development company. Fueled by a desire for revenge, Bateman sells everything and relocates to Hollywood where he begins to carry out a plan to get even. His plan for revenge is derailed when he goes on a search for the reclusive Meyer Holden, a screenwriter who after several successes went into hiding and has not been heard from since. Occasionally, a screenplay surfaces that has all the characteristics of a Holden, but it is next to impossible to prove. Sam becomes obsessed to the point of ending almost all relationships.

I couldn't help but wonder if the author was trying to make an ironic, inside joke with the choice of the character's name. Meyer Holden is similar to Holden Caulfield, the protagonist of J. D. Salinger's Catcher in the Rye. Meyer Holden is similar to Salinger in that he is a writer who, at the height of his success has decided to go into hiding and refuses to write, despite public protests. There were enough references to Hollywood history to hold my interest and the plot was interesting most of the time, but the characters were not appealing.

3 stars

*Disclosure of Material Connection: I am a member of Innovative Online Blog Tours and a copy of this book was provided to me by the author. Although payment may have been received by Innovative Online Blog Tours, no payment was received by me in exchange for this review. There was no obligation to write a positive review. All opinions expressed are entirely my own and may not necessarily agree with those of the author, publisher, publicist, or readers of this review. This disclosure is in accordance with the Federal Trade Commision’s 16 CFR, Part 255, Guides Concerning Use of Endorcements and Testimonials in Advertising* ( )
  Tammy.Ford.Cuevas | Aug 31, 2012 |
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Hollywood died on me as soon as I got here. Welles said that, not me, but damn if he didn’t nail it, you know? Sam Bateman came to Hollywood to settle a score, but amidst the sunny and 75, his plans went astray. Everything changed the day he drank in the intoxicating legend of Meyer Holden, the greatest screenwriter Hollywood has ever known, the one who pulled a Salinger and walked away. Holden now tacks pseudonyms onto his works and buries them in the bottomless sea of spec that is Hollywood’s development process. They’re out there for anyone to find--but at what cost? In his quest, Bateman severs all ties and sinks into a maddening world of bad writing and flawed screenplays. Paranoid and obsessive, the belligerent savant encounters an eccentric cast of characters--each with an agenda--in his search for the one writer in Hollywood who does not want to be found. Phil Brody’s The Holden Age of Hollywood is at once a detective novel, an unexpected love story, and a provocative expos#65533; of a broken industry. With dark humor and incisive commentary, the novel immerses readers in a neo-noir quest to attain the Hollywood dream, integrity intact.

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