I turned 14 in 1985, and “Meat Is Murder” by the Smiths had a pretty big influence on my life - I’m 48 now, and I haven’t eaten meat since. I feel slightly different about Morrissey these days (turns out he’s a bit of a dick), but as an adolescent I worshipped Smiths records.
This book is NOT your usual 33⅓ publication. There’s no insight into the background, composition, recording, release or promotion of the album, nor is there any discussion of the music itself. Instead, we are treated to an account of an American high-schooler as he tries to make sense of the usual teenage traumas (friends, girls, booze, pop music), all happening while “Meat Is Murder” plays in the background. I suspect it’s largely fiction, and the author admits as much right at the beginning.
It’s a pretty cool story though, full of rhythm and brilliantly narrated, populated by an entertaining cast of characters moving wildly through adolescence and, like “Meat Is Murder” itself, it makes a decent fist of nailing the teen-angst thing. I raced through it in pretty much one sitting.
But, a 33⅓ book, really?
I enjoyed the story, but I’m ultimately left with a huge sense of missed opportunity. Damn.