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Loading... Blue Marlinby Lee Smith
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. 3.5 A lightheaded breath of Southern air. Which after reading about murder, gulags and East Germany, I desperately needed. Our narrator is a young girl, who loves to spy on people. Of course she sees things she shouldn't, one of which affects her own family. As a young child she is cosseted and used to doing whatever she feels. This will change too. Her observations and descriptions are often amusing, some wise beyond her years. She and her mother share a love of movie and the stars that make them. This is a nostalgic time period, when the box office and movie magazines were all the rage. Big stars like Tony Curtis and Cary Grant, Frank Sinatra, Ava Gardner, whose movie, marriages and divorces were big news. The little family end up in Key West, under less than ideal circumstances, staying at the, yep, Blue Marlin Motel. What they find there is something that actually happened in Smith's own life. Autobiographical fiction and s fun read, of a time gone by. Lee Smith describes in her afterward how this book mimicked her own life. ARC from Edelweiss no reviews | add a review
Lee Smith brings her masterful storytelling magic to this jewel of a novella that follows Jenny, an adventurous thirteen-year-old, down to Key West for a patched-up family vacation following the discovery of her father's illicit affair. Available for the first time as a stand-alone novella, this book centers on the Blue Marlin Motel, where Jenny, her beautiful socialite mother, and chastened father share their sunny days with movie stars who are in town to make the movie Operation Petticoat. Jenny is precocious and a bit of a sleuth, so her innocent "observations" to uncover the secrets of movie stars also end up revealing the secrets of her own family. Jenny confronts the frailty of family life while also vying for the attention of actor Tony Curtis and even a role in his movie. Smith delivers humor and honesty to her flawed characters with genuine Southern dignity. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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The story starts in the summer that Jenny turns 13. She likes to spy on people and when she finds out interesting tidbits, she writes them in her Davy Crockett spiral notebook. "I would use this stuff later in my novels." Her mother is a beautiful woman who loves to read about movie stars and knows all about their lives. Her father is a lawyer and a respected man in town so when Jenny finds out that he is having an affair (she found out by spying on Carroll Byrd who was very different than the rest of the women in town), she knows that she can't tell her mother so doesn't know what to do. Her mother, of course, finds out and the family goes on a trip to Key West to try to resolve their problems. When they check into their hotel in Key West (Blue Marlin) they find out that many movie stars are staying there as they film Operation Petticoat.
Jenny is able to meander all over Key West and makes some interesting friends along the way. The book is full of humor but also sadness as Jenny tries to help her parents reconcile. Seeing the world, no matter how ugly it can be, through Jenny's eyes is a real treat and makes this book well worth reading. ( )