Hornsby, Nick. High Fidelity. New York: Riverhead Books, 1995.
Annotation: Rob is a record shop owner who is a grown man stuck in a 19 year old mentality. His girlfriend leaves him and all he can do is obsess over which girl in is his life hurt him the most and blame them for everything.
Reason for nomination: This is essentially an adolescent story using a grown man as the protagonist. The book starts out with Rob as a young teenager trying to make sense of girls and moves up to him as a grown man trying to figure out women. Though out the story he is generally self-obsessed and self-centered. The POV is first person with him telling the story as if he is telling the story to you. The way he tells the story Nick Hornsby creates a character that is questionable in believability as a narrator and generally a jerk. Then throughout he shows little situations that redeem him just slightly. I think for some adolescents they will prefer the more adult character instead of the usual books for teens about teens. This protagonist allows us to be in the head of someone maybe we don’t actually want to be. I do question a little bit how much Rob actually grows in the book, but when you’re as immature as Rob it does not take much to grow up.
Genre: Adult "market" authors, fiction.