Once Upon a Time in Hollywood cover art

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood

The First Novel by Quentin Tarantino

Preview
Try Premium Plus free
Pick 1 audiobook a month from our unmatched collection - including bestsellers and new releases.
Unlimited access to our all-you-can-listen catalogue of 15K+ audiobooks and podcasts
Access exclusive sales and deals.
£8.99/month after 30 days. Renews automatically.

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood

By: Quentin Tarantino
Narrated by: Jennifer Jason Leigh
Try Premium Plus free

£8.99/month after 30 days. Renews automatically. See here for eligibility.

Buy Now for £12.99

Buy Now for £12.99

About this listen

Quentin Tarantino's long-awaited first work of fiction - at once hilarious, delicious and brutal - is the always surprising, sometimes shocking new novel based on his Academy Award-winning film.

The sunlit studio back lots and the dark watering holes of Hollywood are the setting for this audacious, hilarious, disturbing novel about life in the movie colony, circa 1969.

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood tells the story of washed-up actor Rick Dalton. Once Rick had his own television series, a famous Western called Bounty Law. But 'it ain't been that time in a long time' and now Rick's only regular parts are as the heavy, ready to be bested by whichever young 'swingin' dick' the networks want to make a new star out of come pilot season. When a talent agent approaches Rick about starring in Italian Westerns ('Eye-talian Westerns?'), it only ignites a new crisis of confidence for the perpetually insecure actor.

And then there's Rick's stunt double, Cliff Booth, a war hero who killed more Japanese soldiers during the Second World War than any other American and who never thought he'd make it back home. If Rick's career has stalled, Cliff's has flamed out. Already living under a cloud of suspicion after the strange death of his wife at sea, Cliff makes the mistake of picking the wrong fight on set and is soon reduced to the status of Rick's full-time gofer.

Right next door to Rick's still glamourous Benedict Canyon home ('the house that Bounty Law built') some Hollywood dreams are coming true, and these dreams belong to Sharon Tate. Not only is she Mrs. Roman Polanski - married to the only true rock-star director - but Sharon is fast becoming a star in her own right, living life on the upswing in a tough town.

Only a few miles away, in the desert around Chatsworth, lives a different kind of dreamer. Charles Manson is an ex-con who has spellbound a group of hippie misfits living with him in squalor on an old 'movie ranch'. Little do his young followers know to what degree Charlie himself is an industry striver, more desperate for Columbia Records and Tapes' attentions than for the revolution he preaches.

These indelible characters - and many more: an acting child prodigy beaming with hope; a booze-drenched former A-lister who's lost it all - occupy a vanished world from not so long ago that is brought to brilliant life. Here is 1969, the music, the cars, the movies and TV shows. And here is Hollywood, both the fairy tale and the real thing, as given to us by a master storyteller who knows it like the back of his hand.

©2021 Quentin Tarantino (P)2021 Orion Publishing Group
Fiction Genre Fiction Historical Movie, TV & Video Game Tie-Ins Science Fiction Suspense Thriller & Suspense Funny Witty Celebrity

Listeners also enjoyed...

Buddy Babylon cover art
Killing Time in Charleston cover art
The Missing Hancocks: The Complete BBC Radio Series cover art
Bloodwood Creek cover art
Helter Skelter cover art
The Cutting Room cover art
All the Gin Joints cover art
Drunk on a Plane cover art
The Ranger cover art
The Martian cover art
Artemis cover art
Alien: Covenant Origins cover art
The Sun Also Rises cover art
The Devil May Dance cover art
Earthcore cover art
Nailing It cover art
All stars
Most relevant
Rick Dalton is an actor who fears, with good reason, that his best days are behind him. He’s having to settle for spaghetti Westerns and telly shows. But once he’d been on the shortlist for the Steve McQueen role in The Great Escape. His stuntman best friend, Cliff Booth, is Rick’s stunt double; his effortlessly calm demeanour disguises a turbulent personal history. Tarantino’s novel, based on the movie, tells their intertwining stories against the backdrop of late ‘60s Hollywood: a party world peopled by the bright, young, and beautiful. Rick’s neighbours are director Roman Polanski and his actress wife Sharon Tate. The novel isn’t quite a novelisation. It contains some scenes that aren’t in the film, and some that are. There’s more space here for character development. At times, you sense it’s Tarantino talking as opposed to his characters, eg when Cliff rhapsodises about Kurosawa movies. But it doesn’t really matter; it’s good fun. It works best as a companion piece to the movie, though could be read on its own. It’s a series of tableaux, albeit interlinked, but not entirely linear. The chronology is a bit confusing. Again, it doesn’t seem to matter; it’s a funny read, or listen, with the odd poignant moment. Tarantino clearly feels late ‘60s Hollywood, just before the Tate murders, was an idyllic place. He loves everything about it and that comes across. As ever, his manic enthusiasm is contagious. The Spotify soundtrack to the movie is worth a listen: it contains genuine radio jingles that were popular at the time; also used in the movie. There’s an attention to detail in the film and the book - and on the soundtrack - that’s entirely absorbing, though if you don’t share Tarantino’s obsessions, best to give them all a wide berth… this book is really an add-on for fans of the movie, in the mould of the big novel/movie tie-ins that became popular in the ‘60s and ‘70s. For cinephiles, it’s wonderful stuff, with tantalising gossip about Hollywood greats; some of it might even be true… The narration works well - a dry, laconic semi-drawl that fits in well with the material. I sped it up after roughly the halfway or two-thirds mark, as I found it just a little too slow at ‘normal’ speed - and it worked just as well (for me) at around double-speed, or just under.

Myths, monsters, and mayhem in 1960s Tinseltown

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

builds perfectly on the film giving more depth to the story and characters showing tarentino can write as well as he can direct.

a fantastic addition to the movie

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

A captivating and thrilling Hollywood romp.

I loved the film but I LOVED the book! I didn’t think this would be as expansive, varied, and rich as it is, but boy does it deliver on all fronts.

It is just as rich as his movies and probably my favourite novel of 2021.

A captivating and thrilling Hollywood romp

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

Best audiobook I’ve ever listened to. Love the film and this opens up the world so much more and adds a different spin on some things. Jennifer Jason Leigh is incredible.

Tarantino is simply the best

The best

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

l bought the book after l'd seen the movie. listening to the book, l found myself remembering scenes that hadn't been in the movie as if they had. It's definitely the best add on to a movie ever. It's seemless. I grew up with the westerns people talk about, but too young for the films and the Manson murders, but watching and listening to Mr Tarentinos twist, nobody could possibly walk away not thinking how tiny shifts can go North or South while you're not paying attention. North was so possible. Close but no cigar.
All in all? It was like being dragged round by Mr Tarentino watching what happened.
How many times have l listened/read? Lost count. More times than l watched the movie. Tarentino puts the director's cut in my head.

Everything

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

See more reviews