The Jazz Loft Project
by Edward S. Curtis Jr. (1980)
Like 'Blue Bossa', this captures the soul of jazz with evocative historical imagery.

by Bart Schneider (2011)
Quiet and imaginative, Derek O'Reilly spends a lot of time watching a movie in his head. His fiance Nathan, aka "Mr. Alpha," wonders why Derek hasn't taken any interest in their wedding planning. Aunt Fran--his spiritual guru--would like to know when her guilt-tripping nephew became some kind of kept boy. One evening, she drops Derek's childhood journal on his lap, forcing him to remember the name he's been trying to forget since he was eleven years old. Nicolai Lund. Nick was Derek's neighbor--and first love. Weeks before Derek's engagement party, a chance meeting with Nick catapults Derek into the past. Nick could flood Derek's stale existence like a blond tidal wave, but Nick isn't that sixteen-year-old rebel anymore. He's a man hardened by invisible scars. As Derek reads through his diary, Nick and Derek's powerful relationship sways between past and present, sweeping over their emotional landscape, revealing what they were, still are, and might yet be to each other.
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by Edward S. Curtis Jr. (1980)
Like 'Blue Bossa', this captures the soul of jazz with evocative historical imagery.

by Helen Macdonald (2020)
Similar to 'Blue Bossa', it offers a profound, poetic exploration of complex subjects.

by Gabriel García Márquez (1985)
Like 'Blue Bossa', it weaves a rich tapestry of life, love, and loss with lyrical prose.

by Robin D. G. Kelley (2008)
As 'Blue Bossa' delves into jazz, this biography offers deep insight into a musical icon.
by Ashley Kahn (2001)
Echoing 'Blue Bossa', this dissects the creation of a seminal jazz album with deep appreciation.
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