Joe Pernice is the singer-songwriter behind The Pernice Brothers. His previous band was The Scud Mountain Boys, and he has also recorded under the name Chappaquiddick Skyline. He runs his own record label and has also published a book of poetry.
"Meat is Murder is a page-scorcher, especially when you see
Pernice's own experiences practically oozing from the text." Filter
magazine "Effectively captures the crushing blows and dizzying
triumphs of adolescence, particularly the sense of urgency involved
in matters of young love." The Berlin Daily Sun "Pernice captures
the essence of the anglophile UK indie lovers that exist in little
groups all over North America...Pernice's novella captures [the]
feelings of the despair of possibility, of rushing out to meet the
world and the world rushing in to meet you, and the price of that
meeting. As sound tracked by the Smiths." Drowned in Sound "The
novella by the leader of the lush, sad-eyed indie-pop band the
Pernice Brothers is full of mordant wit and real heartache. And his
fictional (though heavily autobiographical) tale of a tortured
Massachusetts high school student who finds solace by listening to
Morissey is a dead-on depiction of what it feels like when pop
music articulates your pain with an elegance you could never hope
to muster [H]is tale of a lonesome boy, a Walkman, and Meat is
Murder does a brilliant job of capturing how, in a world that
doesn't care, listening to your favorite album can save your life."
The Philadelphia Inquirer "With his astute perceptions and graceful
language, the guy [Pernice] can write circles around most of the
popular novelists today, and then whack them in the head later on
with his melody." Nighttimes.com "Local singer/songwriter and now
first-time novelist Joe Pernice seems to have near total emotional
recall, in the same way a great athlete possesses top-notch muscle
memory. The result is that the bulk of his creative output proves
to be as viscerally convincing as it is deeply felt His emotionally
precise imagery can be bluntly, chillingly personal His
well-developed sense of character, plot and pacing shows that he
has serious promise as a novelist." Weekly Dig "His (Pernice's)
perceptive, poetic ear for unpicking the work
"The story never reaches a true resolution, but that's part of the
pleasure of it Pernice takes pains to capture a teenage voice,
although the language refrains from self-pity the dramatic
uncertainty of the language holds together the narrative." The
Columbia Spectator "However autobiographical this story might be,
it's never predictable or less than heartfelt. The narrator's
classmates are sketched fondly, his teachers with a little healthy
malice and the music with great affection." Newsday "An essential
purchase for any fan of good new rock-write in general - a slim,
confessional novella equal to anything written by Nick Hornby. "
Bandoppler Magazine "It is beautifully written." The Times (London)
"Continuum knew what they were doing when they asked songwriter Joe
Pernice to pay homage to the Smith's Meat is Murder." Austin
American-Statesman "Fans of Pernice's lyrical work in the Pernice
Brothers and Scud Mountain Boys will find the same qualities of his
lyrical wordplay used here, equal parts bitter and sweet Pernice
excels at evoking the feeling that almost any listener of
underground music first has when encountering it, of stumbling onto
a vein of something previously unknown, but far more immediate than
anything that's come before." -Tobias Carroll, Earlash, 01/21/04 "
Pernice writes about the album the only way a true teenager
would-clumsily, overflowing with enthusiasm and praise, and
beautifully the novella is a wonderfully brief, swift read that
nevertheless is as powerful as the greatest of EPs." -Andrew
Unterberger, Stylus magazine, 1/1/3/04
"my personal favorite of the batch has to be Joe Pernice s
autobiographic-fiction fantasia on The Smiths Meat Is Murder.
Stirring, evocative reading, and like the other two books, it made
me want to seek out and hear the music again. Michael Layne Heath,
Tangents
"What is it about the Smiths that prompts otherwise sane men to
take an 80s youth that heaven knows was miserable then and turn it
into a memoir? This singer-songwriter pens a pleasant semi-autobio
about how this witty band's least-witty moment saved him from
Catholic school, Reaganism and playing the bass poorly B" Austin
American-Statesman, 10/17/04
"Meat is Murder is as droll as any of his songs, as its asthmatic
narrator recounts his days in a Catholic high school outside Boston
in 1985 and how his life was changed by the discovery of the
Smith's third album-on cassette, of course. His descriptions of
friends are priceless and sweet " -Kathleen Wilson, The Stranger,
November 19, 2003
mentioned in The Boston Herald
this short, unassuming novella of 102 small pages captures more of
youth, with all its painful, mad obsessions and enthusiasms, and
all its longueurs, than any number of much longer books. If you ve
ever been young and in love with a band, you have to read Meat is
Murder. Bookslut, 3/9/05
Joe Pernice s take on the Smiths Meat is Murder might be the best
in the series thus far Part Dazed and Confused and part Virgin
Suicides, the book is a funny, elegiac rumination on the pains and
perils of adolescence and the anodyne that certain albums can be to
an outsider being smothered by dullness and angst By fashioning his
criticism as fiction, Pernice comes closest to evoking the
transporting and restorative effect a song can have. - The Boston
Phoenix, 7/8/04--Mike Miliard
Mention in review of Joe Pernice's new book 'It feels so good when
I stop.' Australia.tmcnet.com 2/8/09
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