The Voice of the Loy Norrix Community

Knight Life

The Voice of the Loy Norrix Community

Knight Life

The Voice of the Loy Norrix Community

Knight Life

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Tower Talk: What classes are you looking forward to next year?
Tower Talk: What classes are you looking forward to next year?
Finn Bankston, Staff Writer • April 18, 2024

President Isabella Essink and Treasurer Ella Stangl look over the agenda for an NHS meeting. The club meets biweekly to go over events and volunteer opportunities.
Young women involved in civic engagement and leadership face pressure to outperform
Lucy Langerveld, Staff Writer • April 16, 2024

2023 was dubbed by mainstream media as the “Year of The Girl”: the "Barbie" movie dominated movie theaters and powerhouse pop artists like...

Sophomore Z Freed conducts blood tests in science class.  Freed finds that doodling on herself or her papers for schools helps her to stay focused and understand the material better.
Teens use art to express their emotions and feelings
Faye Radley, Guest Writer • April 15, 2024

It was the middle a weekend afternoon and Torin Radley, a teenage artist, was excited about making a new "Dungeons and Dragons" character. Radley...

“Juliet, Naked”: Bathrooms, Demo Tapes, and Obsession in One Small Book

Juliet, Naked book cover

By Piper Simons

Next time you go to Barnes and Noble, skip the Teen Paranormal Romance section and go to the H shelf in Literature and Fiction. Pick up “Juliet, Naked” by Nick Hornby. “Juliet” is a quick read that has real-life dialogue with a quick-paced plot.

Duncan is a professor in his 40s who has an obsession with the fictional music artist Tucker Crowe. He and his girlfriend Annie travel to America from London to visit place’s he’s been to, including bathrooms he has used. Tucker Crowe has been out of the spotlight for decades now for unknown reasons. On their arrival home, they get a package containing Crowe’s first album in years. The album, called “Juliet, Naked”,  ends up putting Duncan and Annie’s whole relationship into question.

This book raises so many questions about what’s important in life and whom you should trust. Not only who you should trust, but who is worthy of spending your life with. Realizing that Tucker Crowe doesn’t exist in real life will make you want to cry because the whole book talks about how much of an impact his music has on people and you’ll want to experience it yourself. Hornby’s witty humor and obscure musical references combined with scenarios that are relatable to anyone makes this an enjoyable, heartfelt read. You won’t want to finish this book, you’ll slowly read the last few pages and wish you could just have one more chapter.

All of Hornby’s books are fantastic. If you like “Juliet, Naked” you’ll also enjoy “High Fidelity” and “About a Boy.”

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The Voice of the Loy Norrix Community
“Juliet, Naked”: Bathrooms, Demo Tapes, and Obsession in One Small Book