Available Formats
I Look Forward to Hearing from You
By (Author) Nick Bhasin
Random House Australia
Vintage (Australia)
13th June 2023
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Modern and contemporary fiction: general and literary
Paperback
384
Width 155mm, Height 232mm, Spine 29mm
505g
'I wish I could write like Nick Bhasin ... but reading his writing is the next best thing.' SAMMY J 'Bhasin hits that sweet spot of emotional depth while also being absurdly funny.' MARK HUMPHRIES It's 2002. Britney and Justin are done. Low-rise jeans tyrannise the pants-wearing public. And Hector Singh, a 27-year-old eccentric, moderately talented yet extremely confident aspiring TV writer, is hell bent on 'making it' in LA. He's Puerto Rican and Indian but also post-race (or so he thinks) and he refuses to be intimidated by the Whites Only landscape of show business. But when his mother dies suddenly, Hector's grief turns into depression, triggering dark thoughts and a binge-eating disorder. He lands a potentially career-launching job as a writers' assistant on a TV drama, but antidepressants make things much worse. With a series of implosions that threaten to sink his work and relationships, Hector unravels. Spectacularly. Can he navigate Hollywood racism, diet-culture oppression and overwhelming grief to survive this emotional crisis Does he pull himself together in time to sell his TV show in a meeting with big producers Will he catch an extremely fit Tom Cruise and give him a script Seems unlikely. A hilarious, satirical, madcap and moving roller-coaster ride through the world of Hollywood as seen through one person's descent into despair.
Nick Bhasin is a writer and editor based in Sydney, but originally from the US. His writing has appeared in a variety of publications, including the New York Times, the Guardian, the Sydney Morning Herald, the Age, Junkee and McSweeney's and he has occasionally appeared on ABC Melbourne radio as a cultural attache . He won the US music game show Name That Tune and his satirical parenting blog 'Daddy's Little Miracle' was selected to join the New York Times' parenting section's blogroll. Nick has worked as an editor for Junkee, 10 Daily, SBS, Foxtel Magazine and OK! Magazine. He has a tremendous speaking voice.