THE VESTAL VIRGIN
ROOM
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"In the car, and in the confinement of their hotel rooms, the tension between them begins to mount. Don's brashness grows more pronounced as he tries to hide his nervousness. Dottie, who knows how much he wants this chance, cannot express her own ambivalence. Gradually, as we hear first one point of view, then the other, all their conflicting ambitions, as well as their mutual tragedy, are brought to the surface, threatening to destroy the love that has sustained them so long.
"Juxtaposing the outrageously comic scenes of Don and Dottie's public performances with the intense soul-searching of their private moments, C.W., Smith has created a brilliantly balance dnovel fraught with laughter and tears."
"Like all good stories about moratality and change, TheVestal Virgin Room is full of life and memorable details....Smith sizes up his characters just right, with humor and compassion, and that's not as easy as he makes it look." -- Texas Observer.
"C.W. Smith has endowed his characters with such warmth and humor one cannot help liking them as much as the author obviously does. Married love -- the pitfalls and triumphs of a love-term relationship -- seldom has been portrayed with such fine balance. The Vestal Virgin Room is both heartbreaking and hilarious; Smith has achieved that most difficult of genres, the tragi-comic novel." -- St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
"The main theme of The Vestal Virgin Room -- facing your limitations and not allowing them to cheat you out of happiness -- rings out loud and true. Add in Smith's entertaining riffs about the ins and outs of show business on the lower levels and you've got a quick, clever and, above all else, refreshingly affectionate novel. And afer you've read it, I doubt that you'll every watch another Don and Dottie act in a hotel lounge with quite the same smug attitude." -- Houston Post.
"The Vestal Virgin Room is a marvelous document of everyday human aspiration and acceptance." -- Dallas Morning News.
"That Don and Dottie manage to ride out the turbulence in their marriage and emerge as survivors makes this a lovely and tender book." -- Publisher's Weekly.
"...this novel offers a thoroughly convincing look at sometimes confused but decent, intelligent, loving people." - Booklist.
"C.W. Smith has a wonderful ear for dialogue, and his re-creation of Don and Dottie's act is brilliant in its authentic mediocrity. They will never be stars, yet they remain optimistic and loving through small triumphs and major setbacks. This very funny yet essentially serious novel is a genuine pleasure." -- Miami Herald.
The Vestal Virgin Room "takes us on an odyssey stretching from the conservative Midwest to Las Vegas with a surprisingly moving blend of satire, compassion, debauchery and pathos....humor and tragedy are as much in harmony here as Don and Dottie's singing duets." - Newsday.
"Readers can hope that if the worst that can happen ever becomes a reality for them, they will face it with the strength and dignity of these two memorable characters." -- The Kansas City Star.
The Vestal Virgin Room is currently under option with Ken Lipper Associates, with an adaptation being written by David Botrell.
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