Saturday, January 29, 2011

Shameless self promotion

You might be interested in checking out a local book  page, www.communitybookcompany.com .  You can also link to The Shelfstalker from that page. (Since Mitchell Books has ceased to be, I have moved to this page as well.)

American Rose - Gypsy Rose Lee

AMERICAN ROSE by Karen Abbott (Random House, 978-1-4000-6691-9)  in American  recalls another era in American entertainment and culture.  For those too young to recall, Gypsy  Rose Lee was the subject of GYPSY, the Broadway musical, a witty denizen of late night talk shows, an author, and above all, a striptease artist par excellence.  She excelled more with the tease in her act than the bump and grind  and made removing long gloves and silk stocking a tantalizing adventure.  That was back in the days when vaudeville and burlesque was king and girls, girls, girls were big attractions.  Long before MTV and music videos made most strippers redundant.  But then I digress.  This biography strips away a lot of the hype that surrounded Gypsy (most of which she created for herself ) and looks at her rather bizarre and tawdry early like.  Her mother Rose was a piece of work who did dedicate herself to getting her daughters to be stars by any means possible.  And some means were pretty despicable.  June Havoc, Gypsy's sister, was better known as an actress and probably was really the talented one.  Evidently Gypsy was willing to do more to keep Mama Rose happy.  Or maybe she was more ambitious.  The back street back story of the gritty existence of the vaudeville performers is well described.  Besides chronicling the life of Gypsy, the book is a popular history of the entertainment circuit life.  You had to be tough.  Abbott has researched Gypsy's childhood, if she really had one as she started on stage before most kids were in kindergarten, through to her death.  We see her clawing her way to stardom and trying to please and placate Mama Rose.  Money motivated Gypsy more than most anything else, but she did have one great love in her life.  Mike Todd.  Yes, the same Mike Todd who later was with Liz Taylor.  But that was doomed to fail.  She had one son, by a father she chose and never looked back.  She had a complicated family life in her adulthood.  She and her sister both had a love hate relationship with their mother and were prickly with each other.  They were all tough characters whose lives had more than a few unsavory moments.  Most people now think of Gypsy, if they do at all, as the witty ex exotic dancer they saw on talk shows or the glamorized version from the musical.  Abbott presents Gypsy and her family warts and all.  In fact some of the aspects of her life I would just as soon bypassed.  Sex habits,  Affairs. Suspicious deaths.  Mobsters.  It is all there to read about.  The attention to detail is overwhelming.  And the source citing is amazing.  Abbott may write sensational and titillating biographies but they are well researched.  Besides being a very open and in depth look at an American pop icon from the past, this is a colorful coverage of a slice of Americana long gone from our cultural scene.  Back in the fifties when I lived in Hammond, Indiana the neighboring town of Calumet City was famous (infamous) for its plethora of strip clubs.  Visitors would often ask about visiting some of them.  I doubt if that would be the case today.  I suspect the shows that might have drawn interest then are have present day counterparts that are easily available on TV or at least in Vegas..   Abbott also wrote the bestseller, SIN IN THE SECOND CITY.

Friday, January 28, 2011

Winter doldrums set in

All the snow and cold make one wish for spring and the budding of trees and spring blooms. But if I can not have that I will have to make do with books.
And for a sassy, witty, and fast paced romantic adventure Susan Elizabeth Phillips'  CALL ME IRRESISTIBLE  ( Morrow 978-0-06-13515) fills the bill.  If you have read Phillips, you have probably met Ted Beaudine  (Mr. Irresistible) from Texas, Meg Koranda, black sheep daughter of Hollywood royalty, and Lucy Jorick, daughter of a formerAmerican president (female no less) of the United States..  It involves Ted's adoring townsfolk (he is the town's mayor) ,Lucy as a runaway bride, and Meg as the villain in the piece.  Since Meg is broke, she takes on some peculiar jobs in Wynette and faces the collective wrath of the townsfolk who blame her for the cancelled wedding between Lucy and Ted.  It is fun to read the repartee and enjoy the small town ambiance.  It is a romp through the world where all's well that eventually ends well.  The rootless tough loved daughter gets roots and learns to follow her passion and learns to do honest work.   Ted turns out to be more complicated that he seems at first appearance. And the wealthy bully and his pushy daughter get their comeuppance and go back to Indiana. ( I would have preferred people this disagreeable to have been from some other state.)  And all in all it is a pert love story that is good reading on a gloomy day.  As I was reading the book and thoroughly enjoying the imagery the author painted of these ladies and gentleman that came to life like a television episode in my imagination, I chuckled at the  dialogue .  I thought how much the saucy heroine made me think of Lass Small, a friend of mine and former author who just died.  Her Texas heroines (Actually her Indiana ones as well) were as pert and saucy as was  Meg.  I think I might never have read and enjoyed Phillips nearly as much if I had not read Lass years ago.This is fresh and fun novel  Phillips write women's fiction with a colorful flair for spot on characterizations. Some of her people are dead ringers for some real life characters I seem to recall. I will look forward to the next chapter of the lives of the Beaudines and Wynette, Texas.