When You Call My Name by Tucker Shaw6/9/2023 ![]() Peggy’s menu fantasies (recipes included) and her restaurant scenes bring a welcome whiff of bracing mountain air to an otherwise tired chick-lit retread. Luckily, in a rare departure from the play, this Peggy is a budding chef, taken under the wing of a local restaurateur. With no romantic interest of her own, her intense investment in the love affairs of others is downright creepy. The book’s primary difficulty, though, stems from narrator Peggy’s passivity. The emphasis on lavishly conspicuous consumption jars in the current economic climate. ![]() Its characters’ single-minded focus on cheating boyfriends was dated by the ’60s. Here, Shaw faithfully transports characters (even the names are the same), plot and tropes to students at an upscale boarding school in Aspen, Colo. ![]() Its upper-crust, mostly parasitic characters gossip, scheme and compete viciously for the attention of men who remain offstage. Despite an all-female cast, the original play was hardly feminist. ![]() Having previously reworked Cyrano de Bergerac in Flavor of the Week (2003), Shaw again puts his stamp on high-concept YA in this retelling of Claire Boothe’s 1930 Broadway hit, The Women. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |