Reynolds, Marjorie Books

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The Starlite Drive-In: A Novel

Marjorie Reynolds

The Starlite Drive-In: A Novel Marjorie Reynolds List Price: $23.00
By: William Morrow
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 22 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Coming of age tale in Indiana with a mystery twist 4 out of 5 stars.
1 of 1 people found this review helpful.

"The Starlite Drive-In" by Marjorie Reynolds is a coming-of-age tale about a young girl on the cusp of adolescence who learns a lot about life during a long, hot summer in Indiana.
The book opens with the adult Callie Anne Dicksen being summoned to a place where she had spent much of her childhood. The Starlite Drive-In is being torn down by developers when a body and some objects are found. Callie Anne stops by to identify the remains, and is drawn back to the summer of her youth when she changed from a girl to a teenager on her way to becoming a young woman.
Her father is employed to manage the drive-in and spends each night above the concessions stand changing the reels. Her family lives near the grounds in a small house, and her mother, Teal, has not set foot outside for five years. Due to a leg injury, Callie Anne's father is limited in the physical activity he can perform. Into their lives comes a handsome drifter named Charlie Memphis, hired by the theater owner to perform maintenance at the site. Memphis charms mother and daughter, and also proves useful in thwarting a would-be robbery at the theater.
As the summer progresses, Callie Anne realizes that Memphis is less interested in her than her mother, which she at first finds distressing, then confusing as relations with her father deteriorate. Claude Dicksen treats his wife like dirt, while Charlie Memphis treats her like a man ought to treat a woman, and in the long summer evenings while Claude works the reels, an affair develops while Callie Anne eavesdrops from the sidelines.
There are also several subplots; one involving a war veteran named Billy who comes around mooching for food and asking Ms. Dicksen to dance. The other involves Callie Anne's blossoming romance with a boy closer to her own age, Virgil, who runs the ticket booth for Callie Anne's father.

While the book moves in a leisurely summer way, each scene features tension and interesting developments, and the pace and atmosphere really drew me in to the story so that I felt I was there looking over Callie Anne's shoulder. The characters were well-drawn and three-dimensional. There were times you want to be angry with Callie Anne, but you can't help but feel for her with all of the changes going on around her. Her father, Claude, as the antagonist of the piece, has issues but the reader is able to find some sympathy despite his being fairly unlikeable. Charlie Memphis is a dark hero with a mysterious past, and the full truth of some of his history is never clearly divulged. Teal Dicksen, Callie Anne's mother, undergoes the most dynamic transformation, and it's a joy to witness her release from her confinement.
"The Starlite Drive-In" is a moving drama that I could imagine being made into a Hallmark Hall of Fame type film.

Editorial Review:

When land developers uncover human bones at the site of an old drive-in, Callie Anne Benton realizes that she alone knows the identity of the victim who was murdered thirty-six years ago.

In The Starlite Drive-in Callie Anne recalls the tumultuous summer of 1956. She is nearly thirteen and stuck at home with her parents. Her father is an angry, bitter man and her mother is an agoraphobic who hasn't left the house in five years. When a drifter named Charlie Memphis comes to work at the drive-in, everyone's life changes. Callie Anne witnesses the development of an intense relationship between her mother, Teal, and Charlie, who eventually cajoles Teal out of the house but not far enough away to protect her from her ill-tempered husband. A disastrous turn of events eventually leads the grown-up Callie Anne to unlock the secret of the decades-old mystery.

The Civil Wars of Jonah Moran

Marjorie Reynolds

The Civil Wars of Jonah Moran Marjorie Reynolds List Price: $13.95
By: Berkley Trade
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 9 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

More, Please 5 out of 5 stars.
3 of 5 people found this review helpful.

Marjorie Reynolds' book THE CIVIL WARS OF JONAH MORAN sat on my bookshelf for a couple of years before I pulled it out from the near bottom of one of my many stacks of unread books (as a fellow reader I'm sure you can relate to that). Although I should've read this book when it first came out, I'm glad I waited until now. Jonah Moran has Asperger's Syndrome and two years ago I wouldn't have had a clue as to what this was all about. In the past month I have done a lot of research on this syndrome since the child of a friend was diagnosed with it. I had no idea this book referred to A.S. until I started to read it. When they say there are no accidents, they're right.

Back to the story though - this is a wonderful book. I loved Ms. Reynolds' first novel and was not disappointed with this one. Although there are some complex twists and turns to the plot, she manages them with ease and clarity. The relationships between Jessica and her family are realistic & well-developed and the changes that take place are logical. I've spent very little time in the Pacific Northwest, but I enjoyed reading about the area and the Native American side of the story makes it even more interesting.

I place Marjorie Reynolds right up there with Elizabeth Berg, Jane Smiley, and Anita Shreve in her ability to tell a good story about people you'd like to know.

Editorial Review:

Jessica Moran must return to the Northwestern logging town she calls home, when her brother Jonah, the local misfit, is accused of setting a deadly fire. Now, she must face not only her brother's uncertain future, but the deepest secrets of her own past...

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