Tag: college

  • Review of the Blues and BIllie Armstrong By Roy Dufrain

    Review of the Blues and BIllie Armstrong By Roy Dufrain

    The Dead are Dead -Love Live the Dead

    Personal Note:

    I’ve known Roy for 50 years. We first met at UOP in Stockton, California in 1975 when we lived together in the Euclid House for three years with five other students—two girls and two guys. We were infamous for our weekly house parties, splitting bar duties and DJ responsibilities. Roy spun the Grateful Dead, and I played the blues, Tower of Power, funk, and Frank Zappa.  We consider ourselves a counter-cultural co-ed fraternity.

    We often held impromptu poetry slams, with Roy on blues harp and guitar while I ranted and raved about life. Over the years, we’ve kept in touch. Roy lived in Clear Lake for many years and recently “retired” to Alabama—of all places.

    The Blues and Billie Armstrong is his first novel, and I’m certain it won’t be his last. Roy is also a gifted musician and songwriter. He introduced me to the Grateful Dead, and I introduced him to Frank Zappa. While he never turned me into a true Deadhead, I stayed “Dead-adjacent,” so to speak We went once to a Frank Zappa concert, one of the wildest nights of my life, and that is another story for another time..

    📚 Check out my companion post for the full review and details!
    👉 [Link to Review]

    Title:
    🎸 The Blues and Billie Armstrong – A Novel That Sings the Truth 🎶

    Post:

    Roy Dufrain Jr’s The Blues and Billie Armstrong is a haunting, music-infused coming-of-age story set in the 1970s California. It’s about Archer King, a boy navigating grief, secrets, and the power of the Blues—only to face those ghosts decades later when Billie Armstrong, his rebellious stepsister, returns accused of murder.

    If you love novels that blend history, music, and redemption, this one’s for you.

    📚 Read more: Amazon Link
    ✍ Explore the author’s thoughts: Roy Dufrain on Substack

    Title:
    🎶 The Blues and Billie Armstrong: A Novel That Echoes Through Time

    Subtitle:
    Roy Dufrain Jr’s debut blends music, memory, and moral complexity into a story that feels both timeless and urgent.

    Introduction

    In The Blues and Billie Armstrong, Roy Dufrain Jr delivers a lyrical, haunting tale set against the turbulence of 1970s California. This is more than a novel—it’s a meditation on truth, identity, and the enduring power of music.

    Synopsis

    The story begins with Archer King, a thirteen-year-old grappling with his mother’s sudden death. His father’s quick remarriage introduces Billie Armstrong, a rebellious stepsister whose arrival shatters Archer’s fragile world. Together, they uncover old blues records and hidden love letters, sparking a quest that will unravel family secrets and test their loyalties.

    Decades later, Archer—now a Pulitzer-winning columnist—must confront the ghosts of his past when Billie resurfaces, accused of murder. To save her, Archer risks exposing truths that could destroy his career and identity.

    Characters

    • Archer King: A deeply sympathetic protagonist whose evolution forms the novel’s emotional core.
    • Billie Armstrong: Charismatic and unpredictable, embodying rebellion and freedom.
    • Hank Timmons: Archer’s mentor and local baseball hero, torn between ambition and morality.

    Themes & Style

    Dufrain explores grief, betrayal, and redemption with remarkable sensitivity. The Blues serves as both soundtrack and metaphor—a symbol of resilience and cultural memory.

    The End

    Substack

    Medium

    Wattpad

    Spotify

    The End

  • guest post by Roy Dufraine

    guest post by Roy Dufraine

    Guest Blog Roy Dufrain

    Roy was my college roommate at UOP in Stockton, California from 1976 to 1978 when we lived at the Euclid House with Sara, Sharon, Kevin (now Karen) Jeff C, and others.  We had a wild two-year ride with weekly parties every Friday night.   Roy introduced me to the Grateful Dead, the beatnik writers, and so much more.   We lost touch over the years but became Face Book friends and zoom friends about seven years ago.  I miss our time together.  Here are some of his recent Facebook musings re-posted with his permission.

    THE 7TH ANNUAL EDITION OF ROY’S BEST BOOKS,

    wherein I muse, perhaps entirely for my own entertainment, on some books I read or heard this year that landed somewhere in the vicinity of my heart and stayed there for whatever reason.

    This year, I get to start with a special category I’ve never officially included before: GREAT BOOKS BY NICE PEOPLE I ACTUALLY KNOW.

    LIVE CAUGHT

    R Cathey Daniels is swampy and dank, with a magnetic, lyrical voice and a lead character who is properly mystified by life and desperate to rescue one little girl, if not himself, from its worst inclinations. You’ll want to save everyone in the book. Well, almost everyone.

    ATTRIBUTION

    Linda Moore, is an engaging mystery set in the world of art history scholars, with a smart, idealistic heroine to root on toward empowerment and recognition and self-acceptance. And romance!

    BESTSELLING FICTION

    THE LINCOLN HIGHWAY

    Amor Towles, who came to critical acclaim with ‘A Gentleman in Moscow’ several years ago. This newer one feels like a charming thought-provoking coming of age period piece, encased in wonderful and evocative prose, until it all slides sideways into darkness and finally ends with a couple slackmouth twists, the kind that seem shocking yet inevitable at the same time.

    NON-FICTION

    MUSIC: A SUBVERSIVE HISTORY

    Ted Gioia, who is considered by some as one of America’s (if not the world’s) leading writers on music history. This is Gioia’s most far-reaching work yet. The overarching thesis of the book is that innovation in music has always come from outsiders, usually those kept outside the mainstream by self-appointed and self-interested gatekeepers. Nonetheless, over and over, the greatest talents and their ideas somehow find a way to slip past the gates and change everything. It’s a huge book, covering a lot of information; I listened to it on audio, and in spurts, over a few months. Well worth the stretched-out journey! (Also: Ted Gioia writes on many other topics as well, and is one of my favorites on substack.) And BTW, it’s pronounced Joy-uh.

    WORDCRAFT

    I read lots of books on writing craft. I don’t always get a wealth of useful info from them, but I read for the odd bit that resonates and, more than that, for the constant nudge to think deeply about my own reading and writing. Because of that, my favorite craft book is often the one I’m reading right now, and that happens to be THE NUTSHELL TECHNIQUE by Jill Chamberlain. This is actually a screenwriting book, but also offers fiction writers an interesting no-frills framework to analyze the basic ingredients of all stories and their interrelationships.

    ALRIGHT, THAT’S IT FOR THIS YEAR. Make room in your life for a book. Each one is a world on paper.

    (Disclaimer: no books were harmed in the making of this post.)

    ////////////Random observation about baseball

    HARD TO EXPLAIN how MLB teams are signing guys for 20-30-40 million a year right now, but just a couple months ago, they were saying the game’s popularity is slipping so far they have to change the rules to make it faster and more exciting. WTF?!

    The Giants sure are killin’ it on the free agent market so far, right?

    Long before TJ Holmes and Amy Robach there was Kelfy Couric and Gumby Damnit. Big time front page tabloid stuff back in the day.

    Well Christmas

    I’m dreaming of a well Christmas

    Just like the ones I used to know

    Where there is no sneezing

    And lungs aren’t wheezing

    And masks aren’t needed when you go

    I’m dreaming of a well Christmas

    Without a fever or the chills

    May your tests have nothing to tell

    And may all your Christmases be we

     

    Look, Santa: yes I’ve been a naughty boy, but only in the best possible way

    You can find his work at

    Roy Dufrain Jr.

    roydufrain.substack.com