Tuesday, August 27, 2019

STAR SPANGLED SUMMER by Janet Lambert

This summer I bought the complete works of Janet Lambert. You may recall how I aired them out with some (minimal) success They still smell a bit musty, but I put them in order in a lovely bookcase and have started my reading of them.

I was told by many to start with STAR SPANGLED SUMMER and with good reason. It is adorable! However, I was on a road trip with my dear friend Lady Chardonnay and she was kind enough to read CANDY KANE out loud to me, so that was actually my first Lambert. But I am going to wait to write about that until it comes up in order about 5 or 6 posts from now. It was terrific and had more depth than I was expecting.

So - STAR SPANGLED SUMMER is our introduction to the Parrish family who are adorable. The father - Major Parrish (salute) is strong and kind, a military man who is an excellent horseman and a charming husband. The mother Marge is kind and full of fun - always up to help her kids organize some kind of fun or another.

David, the eldest son plays it close to the vest. He is dreamy-ish, mostly because of the way he holds himself apart. He is slated to go to West Point at the end of this summer and is studying and obsessing about equestrian matters.

Penny is adorable! I was worried that I was going to find her enthusiasm tiresome like that of JOAN FOSTER, FRESHMAN (don't ask...) but she was wonderful! A little Tobey Hayden-like with shades of (dare I say?) Betsy Ray. She is a good friend with a creative imagination and definitely her mother's daughter.

Bobby and Tippi are amorphous blobs of little children tropes, but I believe Tippi will become more important as she ages.

There are also two servants - Trudy and Williams who are, well, wonderful people but written a bit problematically. We will get back to them later.

The plot is thus - Carrol Houghton is a poor little rich girl who visits the Parrishs at their home on an army base and finds that the warmth of a close family is far more valuable than material wealth. And also there is intrigue with a jealous bitch named Louise who wants David because she can't have him and may or may not have attempted to murder Carrol to this end.

The thing I am most interested about in these books is the look at how gender, class, and race are dealt with and there is some real meat here.

On page 49 Carrol and David are talking about why girls chase boys and Carrol says, "...a lot of it is because girls don't have any ambition. They aren't planning a future as boys are, and aren't trying to amount to something someday." Well, that stopped me dead in my tracks with its accuracy. Girls did not have a fraction of the opportunities boys had to succeed so they had to find a star to which they could hitch their wagon. A boy-star. Yikes.

Carrol goes on to say that she wants to study languages in college and then "do something" afterwards. She is not like those other girls. She is a cool girl! Well, not really, but she is pretty awesome and is more than just that PLRG trope I expected.

Next up is Tubby. She is a fat girl, naturally, and is teased by the aptly named Dick. I think she is a bit of a wet blanket, but she doesn't deserve to be treated like that. It made me sad. Dick will get his at some point I am sure.

Now a big problem in this book is racism. I know it sounds harsh, but it is clearly there. The attitude towards Trudy (one of the family - couldn't live without her) is kind but patronizing. She is hardworking and kind, with a sense of humor, but all her dialog is in dialect straight out of AMOS AND ANDY. Williams is treated worse - same dialect, but also there are inferences that he is lazy - even though he seems to be Johnny-on-the-spot as far as I am concerned.

There are some sweet parts with Trudy and Williams. Clearly the Parrish's love Trudy and treat her respectfully. After "the hop" Penny takes time to tell Williams how well he played (he is in the second post orchestra). But this is not a book I would give to a kid without talking seriously and thoroughly about how African Americans were treated at this time.

Dialect always creeps me out. Even the brilliant SUMMER OF MY GERMAN SOLDIER used it for Ruth who was otherwise one of the most wonderful characters I ever met in a book. I am hoping this peters out in Lambert's writing eventually, but I don't know if it is likely.

If you have delicate sensibilities, look away now. On page 238 David is being razzed by his friends because he gets to take a plane to West Point with Carrol and her father rather than the train like the other fellows. Dick says, "Aren't you sumptin'. Mr. Gotrocks flying to the Point..." According to Urban Dictionary it means to flaunt money, but it sure sounds like a dick joke to me! It doesn't help that he goes on to say, "We'll all look the same when we get dyked out in those grey flannel shirts." I assume that means "dressed up" but Urban Dictionary assures me it has a very different meaning that is not Parrish approved!

At any rate - I enjoyed this book a lot. The description of life on the base is fascinating and there are some nice touches. At the moonlight picnic the kids ride horses out to where they are going to eat and sing songs not unlike the crowd in the Betsy Tacy books. (They are the gold standard, I am going to reference them a lot!)

So far the war is kind of in the background, but I believe that it is going to be more than just a plot device in these books. I am looking forward to the next installment DREAMS OF GLORY and will let you know what I think when I finish it!