Well, yeah, probably, but I'm not going to concede yet that I'm broken, so we'll just leave it at this. Anyway, I'm proud of Behind the Curtain, particularly because it came so soon after Going Up! Going Up! was all about grown-ups, (okay, well, sort of-- Zach really was the perfect example of the socially-handicapped 8th grader in a man's body) who have decided who they are and what they are going to be.
Behind the Curtain isn't anything like that.
Dawson Barnes isn't a fully fledged grown-up yet. He's not as young as Rusty in Christmas Kitsch, and he's definitely higher on the confidence and self-realization scale, but still-- he's very cognizant that the best part about college is that he's open to possibilities.
Jared Emory, his love interest, has only one of those.

Together they have a rather quirky chemistry, but they also have the seeds of Dawson's adulthood: Dawson needs to see the world from the other side of the curtain. In order to do this, he needs to look beyond what's simple and what's easy, and commit himself to a path. In this case, his path is Jared.
Like Christmas Kitsch, this book borrows a lot from my own experiences as a young adult in love. Unlike Rusty's story, Behind the Curtain plays with my background in theatre, and my love of that big vaulted room with the dusty velvet curtains and the hard, bright lights, and the stories told on stage. I sent this one to Chicken, and she read it and said, "Geez, mom-- you really did pay attention when you were backstage at my dance recital, didn't you!"

I said, "Well, it wasn't like I wasn't in theatre from sixth grade through Junior College, was it!" Of course, unlike Dawson, I decided not to make theater my major (I had nowhere near his talent backstage, and none of Jared's talent in front of the curtain) but still…





Oh yeah-- I swear on my life that's a hat Chicken is holding. I'm going to keep going and keep going, until it's long enough to wrap around the neck and work as a muffler too. Seriously, folks, that is one epic hat. But then, what else did y'all think I was gonna knit?
3 comments:
There is no such thing as too many Amy Lane releases. Actually, I could read a new one every other week:-)
That's exactly what I was going to say Emese!
You totally rock. I am amazed at your output. You and Asimov and Heinlin, only, they're dead now. Write on, Amy! Write on!!
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