Book Description
This retrospective novel as tribute and elegy invites the reader to return
to a time and place, not so very long ago, and a way of life that has
virtually vanished both physically and socially from the American scene. Set
in a blue-collar neighborhood movie theater of a Midwestern city in the
early '60's, this fictional memoir will remind the reader how quickly the
past seems to fade and yet how powerfully it persists unrecognized below the
surface of later conscious decisions. Alternately comic, nostalgic,
reflective, and even whimsical, the narrator recalls his tenure as the
doorman and general flunky of the Imperial Theater threatened by the
competition of television. He gradually drifts into a partnership with the
long time woman manager, desperate to keep the theater going as a community
institution, to restore with his free labor and her personal expense the
dilapidated condition of the theater and to change the format from
traditional B films to musicals of the 40's and 50's.
The memoir itself is a form of restoration, a reliving in
his imagination of a long ago apprenticeship in the workplace, which stood
in sharp contrast to the sheltered enclave of family and school. He
encounters a rich gallery of characters, some of whom assume the role of
mentor, advocating alternative values and a wider horizon of possibilities,
while revealing at the same time the conflicting, ambiguous, and bittersweet
consequences in their own lives that foreshadow the adult world he is about
to enter.
About the
Author
For over three decades Norval Rindfleisch's fiction has
consistently achieved distinction for literary merit. His short
stories have won a cover O. Henry and have been recognized in the "List of
Distinction" of BEST AMERICAN SHORT STORIES. His short story "In Loveless
Clarity" was included in the NORTH COUNTRY READER, a Centennial anthology of
selected prose with Minnesota characters and settings (Minnesota Historical
Society Press (2000) and his novel STANDING LESSONS was recently a finalist
in The Writer's Digest 12th Annual International Competition (2005). Raised
in the Midwest, the setting of most of his stories, he is a graduate of the
University of Chicago and has taught literature and writing on the secondary
and college levels primarily in New England.