老澳门六合彩开奖记录资料

Skip to content

Book Review: Debut 'Do Tell' drags you into Old Hollywood's underbelly in a noir-like novel

鈥淒o Tell鈥 by Lindsay Lynch (Doubleday) Edie O鈥橠are was there that night, the night that changed the lives of a dozen names in Hollywood 鈥 the night Sophie Melrose, newcomer at FWM studios, was sexually assaulted by Freddy Clarke, famous for playing d
20230717170720-64b5b0cf4b554e4d47e81f70jpeg
This cover image released by Doubleday shows "Do Tell" by Lindsay Lynch. (Doubleday via AP)

鈥淒o Tell鈥 by Lindsay Lynch (Doubleday)

Edie O鈥橠are was there that night, the night that changed the lives of a dozen names in Hollywood 鈥 the night Sophie Melrose, newcomer at FWM studios, was sexually assaulted by Freddy Clarke, famous for playing dashing heroes. And for all that Edie wants to be hardened and unattached, Sophie grabs ahold of her heart from the first interaction they have together.

Lindsay Lynch鈥檚 debut novel 鈥淒o Tell鈥 goes far beyond that fateful night in 1939 and the court case that follows 鈥 which is loosely based on the real case brought by Peggy Satterlee and Betty Hansen against actor Errol Flynn 鈥 and creates a noir-like tale of Hollywood鈥檚 underbelly.

Edie鈥檚 acting contract is almost up, and Sophie鈥檚 court case propels her into a new career as a gossip columnist. She suddenly finds herself in competition with Poppy, whom she used to feed gossip to from the FWM sets, premiers and parties because Edie has learned how to blend in with a crowd. She鈥檚 learned the trade, how to barter information and pull strings, when to make up details and even full stories. But some stories may be beyond her control.

When the trial ends, the fallout is quickly overshadowed by a world war, casting a shadow over Hollywood to both ludicrous and devastating effect.

Despite the flowing dresses and gilded everything, the glamor of Old Hollywood is met with a distinctly noir feel that Edie brings as she sleuths in the proverbial shadows, using dirty tricks and touching moments of empathy alike to get where she needs to go. She鈥檚 a hardboiled detective and a femme fatale all wrapped up in one. And, like a good noir, the clues were there, but you鈥檒l have to wait until Edie pieces it together to get the full story. For all her skills and conniving, there鈥檚 something big she鈥檚 overlooked.

Pithy, sharp-witted comments jab directly at society. Edie鈥檚 like a cool aunt who's wise beyond her years but can still party it down and has connections all over town. She sees through the farces of Hollywood, the fake engagements and double standards, and finds a way to enjoy herself and be part of it anyway.

Things get terribly messy, but the ending is surprisingly sweet, a poetic justice that is not at all what you would expect from the opening chapters, turning a book about Hollywood gossip and the patriarchy into one about love and how to find fulfillment.

If your best subject at trivia is Turner Classic Movies, if you go to conventions dressed like a starlet from Hollywood鈥檚 gilded age, 鈥淒o Tell鈥 is a must-read.

Donna Edwards, The Associated Press

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks