1.11k reviews for:

The Music Shop

Rachel Joyce

3.69 AVERAGE

hopeful mysterious sad medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character

“FOR THE MUSIC YOU NEED!!! EVERYONE WELCOME!! We only sell VINYL! And if you told Frank the kind of music you wanted, or simply how you felt that day, he had the right track in minutes. It was a knack he had. A gift. He knew what people needed even when they didn’t know it themselves.” But physician heal thyself. Frank ignored his own painful past until one day a woman in a green coat fainted in front of his shop. Unlike with most folks, Frank could not figure her out. “He had never heard such silence in a person. Nothing had come from her. Not one note.” This was a lovely story by the author of “The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry and The Love Song of Miss Queeny Hennessey. Recommend for everyone who loves music, friendship, love and of course vinyl! -- Amy O.

This is a delightful and entertaining novel. Once again, the author does what she does best. Her prose is simple, yet quite profound in its simplicity which often makes it very moving. She taps into the humanity of ordinary folks and makes her characters extraordinary. If you love music and you remember vinyl records spun from a bygone era, I highly recommend.

bring a music and book critic, I love reading books about music. it’s 1988 and a guy runs a music ship in London. he’s old-school and insists on vinyl only even though CDs are gaining popularity. 🎧🎸💿 i never got into records or had a record player. it was cassettes and then CDs for me. In 1988 I was 18, a freshman in college. 🤷🏻‍♀️

a fun and light book.

Audiobook.

Frank, a shopkeeper in a London neighborhood that's seen better days, has a knack for choosing just the right vinyl records to make his customers feel better. He doesn't store records alphabetically or by genre, but rather by how they make you feel--less lonely, more open to wonder, amorous toward a long-time spouse. Brahms might be adjacent to Aretha Franklin or the Pet Shop Boys.

We're introduced to the community's collection of ordinary people, their quirky selves drawn lovingly. Joyce's style reminds me a lot of Fredrick Backman's (A Man Called Ove).

At first I thought The Music Shop hewed too closely to Little Paris Bookshop. And in fact the two books really do bear a lot of similarities. But Rachel Joyce builds this little community of lovable oddfellows so sweetly that I was transported. I also learned some arcana about classical composers. Turns out that Bach and Handel had the same charlatan eye surgeon, for instance, and that Moonlight Sonata was named so not by Beethoven but by a critic.

This is the first book I've binge read in quite a while, and also the first in years whose final pages I took in through happy tears.

What a lovely story - I just wanted to hug every character in here. If you’re a fan of music, and believe that music can make a huge impact in a person’s life, you’ll want to read this one!

I have read two of Rachel Joyce's earlier works, The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Frye and The Love Song of Miss Queenie Hennessy, and this current book tugs at the heart strings in all the same fashion and with similar strength.

Again, as with The Unlikely Pilgrimage…, this is not a book to read before bedtime, although I went against that suggestion this evening in my determination to finally finish the tale. This was a difficult story to read – it frustrated me, made me feel glum yet also inspired. I finally determined to sit down and read through to the end or else the book might remain indefinitely on the side table till it was way overdue at the Library. Semi-spoiler: the story is well worth finishing.

Rachel Joyce is adept at getting to the deep emotions and uncertainties of being human and having to deal with those emotions. Should I ever read another of her books, I will make a point of doing so in the summer and NOT in the winter!

I can't give them all 5 stars, even though I really liked this book. The back cover says something like, "If you loved High Fidelity, you'll love this book" - and I think that ended up being accurate. It probably helped that I could identify with the time period - 1988 - the year I graduated college. I could easily see this book being made into a movie and I would definitely go see it. I really want to know what all the characters look like. Maybe Colin Firth could be Frank and Rachel Weisz could be Ilse. I would have said Bill Nighy is the perfect Frank, but he might be a bit too old for the part. Maybe they all are. Stephen Merchant would definitely be Kit. Janeane Garofalo would be a good Maud - if she can do a British accent. No, maybe Alex Borstein. Oh well, it was a really good book.

Read this for bookclub and it was a fun read with lots of wonderful musical references. I don't love books where people are apart for a long time because of a miscommunication or some other reason. But, I do like how the author resolved this at the end.