A few lines from the book I just started reading:
"Also, if you stay in it for any length of time, like anyplace else, a cafe becomes a world."
"However, it is definitely on the list of perfect things. You know what I mean, the list that includes the starry sky over the desert, grilled cheese sandwiches, The Great Gatsby, the Chrysler Building, Ella Fitgerald singing "It Don't Mean a Thing (If You Ain't Got That Swing)," white peonies, and those little sketches of hands by Leonardo DaVinci." (In reference to The Philadelphia Story.)
"If a girl could sling a poem over her swimwear as though it were an old T-shirt, what else might be possible?"
"I've always been more than a little proud of myself for having been fourteen and deeply benighted about almost everything, but having had the sense to recognize what is surely a universal truth: Jimmy Stewart is always and indisputably the best man in the world, unless Cary Grant should happen to show up."
"Spruce Street: cars and lights; the synagogue on the corner; the hustlers in front of it, male and heartbreakingly young. I felt the two tugs I always felt when I looked at those boys: the tug toward wanting the cars to stop, the tug toward wanting them not to stop."
"Then, I gave him a look so worthy of Veronica Lake, I could almost feel my nonexistent blond tresses falling over one eye."
All from the first chapter. And I so wanted a graceful, fun book to read now.
Okay, so, unless this book starts to suck in a profound way -- which the blurb from Ms. Karen Joy Fowler pretty much guarantees won't happen -- I am very, very happy to be reading it. Should gratuitous Claudette Colbert namedropping be on the way, or perhaps a stray reference to Midnight, I'll love it. The book?
Love Walked in by Marisa de los Santos, which just came out. You can read an excerpt at that link.
Amazing. I love the Jimmy Stewart line - reminds me of the Gregory Peck interview talking about "Roman Holiday", in which he says that whenever he was offered a part in a romantic comedy he always assumed Cary Grant had turned it down.
Posted by: Kevin Wignall | January 11, 2006 at 12:51
yummy. what a lovely excerpt. i've added the book to my list (oh, the growing list)...and then i bumped it up to the top. thanks for the always insightful nudge in the right direction.
Posted by: callie | January 11, 2006 at 15:30