Noble McCloud: A Novel

What makes a musician ‘gifted,’ or any artist for that matter, does not necessarily depend upon his skill and talent with his instrument. The seasoned guitarist, for example, may have mastered his instrument and moved mountains with his sound, but his artistry is not determined by talent alone. Rather, the gift of each musician, the guitarist in particular, is determined by how well he can survive the pangs of reality and at the same time continue playing as skillfully.
Debatable as this premise may seem, it is often the case that the greatest contemporary guitarists are never heard by anyone other than themselves. Those who do succeed are indeed gifted for their ability to withstand circumstance as well as advance their skill and style of play. The amateur guitarist, with a view from the bottom, works primarily on his skills and then hopes to achieve recognition and success by some fantastic turn of events. Rarely does he realize that survival, aside from talent, is equally important, if not more so.
For Noble McCloud, a soft-spoken young man from the suburbs of New Jersey, survival is but a sickness leading to the demise of the musician, and humankind in general. What really matters is the sound, not the walls the musician climbs to have his sound heard. As a result, his world is a dream rich with narcissistic fantasies about playing in packed amphitheaters and making love to groupies off-stage and having the world adore him as a legend. And this is before he even begins playing. He refuses to find a job, even though he’s broke. He would be homeless too, if it weren’t for his best friend and benefactor Shylock Winston, who works at the local coffee shop. When Noble finally decides to play professionally, after going through detox and a twelve-step program, after wooing the woman of his dreams by pretending to be wealthy, he finally grasps the duality of the artist as dreamer and as a person who must survive. This novel examines whether or not he succeeds, whether or not the amateur musician, usually alone and confused, can succeed when no one seems to be listening.

1003399208
Noble McCloud: A Novel

What makes a musician ‘gifted,’ or any artist for that matter, does not necessarily depend upon his skill and talent with his instrument. The seasoned guitarist, for example, may have mastered his instrument and moved mountains with his sound, but his artistry is not determined by talent alone. Rather, the gift of each musician, the guitarist in particular, is determined by how well he can survive the pangs of reality and at the same time continue playing as skillfully.
Debatable as this premise may seem, it is often the case that the greatest contemporary guitarists are never heard by anyone other than themselves. Those who do succeed are indeed gifted for their ability to withstand circumstance as well as advance their skill and style of play. The amateur guitarist, with a view from the bottom, works primarily on his skills and then hopes to achieve recognition and success by some fantastic turn of events. Rarely does he realize that survival, aside from talent, is equally important, if not more so.
For Noble McCloud, a soft-spoken young man from the suburbs of New Jersey, survival is but a sickness leading to the demise of the musician, and humankind in general. What really matters is the sound, not the walls the musician climbs to have his sound heard. As a result, his world is a dream rich with narcissistic fantasies about playing in packed amphitheaters and making love to groupies off-stage and having the world adore him as a legend. And this is before he even begins playing. He refuses to find a job, even though he’s broke. He would be homeless too, if it weren’t for his best friend and benefactor Shylock Winston, who works at the local coffee shop. When Noble finally decides to play professionally, after going through detox and a twelve-step program, after wooing the woman of his dreams by pretending to be wealthy, he finally grasps the duality of the artist as dreamer and as a person who must survive. This novel examines whether or not he succeeds, whether or not the amateur musician, usually alone and confused, can succeed when no one seems to be listening.

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Noble McCloud: A Novel

Noble McCloud: A Novel

by Harvey Havel
Noble McCloud: A Novel

Noble McCloud: A Novel

by Harvey Havel

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Overview

What makes a musician ‘gifted,’ or any artist for that matter, does not necessarily depend upon his skill and talent with his instrument. The seasoned guitarist, for example, may have mastered his instrument and moved mountains with his sound, but his artistry is not determined by talent alone. Rather, the gift of each musician, the guitarist in particular, is determined by how well he can survive the pangs of reality and at the same time continue playing as skillfully.
Debatable as this premise may seem, it is often the case that the greatest contemporary guitarists are never heard by anyone other than themselves. Those who do succeed are indeed gifted for their ability to withstand circumstance as well as advance their skill and style of play. The amateur guitarist, with a view from the bottom, works primarily on his skills and then hopes to achieve recognition and success by some fantastic turn of events. Rarely does he realize that survival, aside from talent, is equally important, if not more so.
For Noble McCloud, a soft-spoken young man from the suburbs of New Jersey, survival is but a sickness leading to the demise of the musician, and humankind in general. What really matters is the sound, not the walls the musician climbs to have his sound heard. As a result, his world is a dream rich with narcissistic fantasies about playing in packed amphitheaters and making love to groupies off-stage and having the world adore him as a legend. And this is before he even begins playing. He refuses to find a job, even though he’s broke. He would be homeless too, if it weren’t for his best friend and benefactor Shylock Winston, who works at the local coffee shop. When Noble finally decides to play professionally, after going through detox and a twelve-step program, after wooing the woman of his dreams by pretending to be wealthy, he finally grasps the duality of the artist as dreamer and as a person who must survive. This novel examines whether or not he succeeds, whether or not the amateur musician, usually alone and confused, can succeed when no one seems to be listening.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940154363867
Publisher: Harvey Havel
Publication date: 03/16/2011
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 470 KB

About the Author

HARVEY HAVEL
Author

Harvey Havel is a short-story writer and novelist. His first novel, Noble McCloud, A Novel, was published in November of 1999. His second novel, The Imam, A Novel, was published in 2000.
Over the years of being a professional writer, Havel has published his third novel, Freedom of Association. He worked on several other books and published his eighth novel, Charlie Zero's Last-Ditch Attempt, and his ninth, The Orphan of Mecca, Book One, which was released last year. His new novel, Mr. Big, is his latest work about a Black-American football player who deals with injury and institutionalized racism. It’s his fifteenth book He has just released his sixteenth book, a novel titled The Wild Gypsy of Arbor Hill, and his seventeenth will be a non-fiction political essay about America’s current political crisis, written in 2019.

Havel is formerly a writing instructor at Bergen Community College in Paramus, New Jersey. He also taught writing and literature at the College of St. Rose in Albany as well as SUNY Albany.

Copies of his books and short stories, both new and used, may be purchased at all online retailers and by special order at other fine bookstores.

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