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Jacqueline Susann's Shadow of the Dolls

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Valley of the Dolls was sexy, shocking, and unrelenting in its revelations of the dangers facing women who dare to chase their most glamorous dreams. It shot to the top of the bestseller lists in 1966 and made Jacqueline Susann a superstar. It remains the quintessential big, blockbuster, must-read, can't-put-down bestseller.
Before her death in 1974, Susann spent many months working on a draft for a sequel that continued the stories of Anne Welles, Neely O'Hara, and Lyon Burke. Now, after nearly thirty years, the perfect writer has been found to turn Susann's deliciously ambitious ideas into a novel that matches the original shock for shock and thrill for thrill.
In Jacqueline Susann's Shadow of the Dolls, Rae Lawrence — herself a bestselling author — picks up the story in the late '80s and brings it right into the new century. Long a devoted “Valley” girl herself, Rae has re-imagined the original characters in a contemporary reality (and adjusted their ages just a bit), exactly as Jackie would have wanted her to. And if you've never read Valley of the Dolls, no matter. Sometimes the present is even more surprising and fun when you don't remember the past.
And what a story! Neely's golden voice has brought her fame and success, but now she craves acceptance in social circles where her kind of celebrity means nothing at all. Anne, born and bred in those very circles, must choose between returning home or pursuing a fabulous television career — and the kind of passion she once knew with Lyon. And Lyon, who loses everything including Anne, looks for happiness in the most unexpected of places.
Taking us behind the closed doors of New York, East Hampton, and Los Angeles, whetting our appetites for more with a new generation of young women and men who grow up far too fast, and spicing the whole story with a generous sprinkling of sex, drugs, and cosmetic surgery, Jacqueline Susann's Shadow of the Dolls is the ultimate beach read for our time. But feel free to devour it any time of the year, wherever you are.
It's been a long time since readers had this much fun between the covers. It's time to jump back in.
Anne Welles . . . She finds the courage to leave the only man who ever made her feel like a woman . . . She fights her way to the top of a television career that is even more cutthroat than she's been warned . . . She finds security and contentment with the kind of man she was destined to marry . . . Now she must choose between destiny and her dreams.
Neely O'Hara . . . Her talents take her to the top, while her troubles drag her through rehab after rehab . . . She grasps at the things Anne has turned her back on (her class, her man) . . . She always knows exactly what she wants, and will do whatever it takes to make her dreams come true.
Lyon Burke . . . He takes lovers over love . . . He hustles other people's
talent while neglecting his own . . . He always knows how to look, which restaurants offer the perfect drink and the most cachet, who to pursue, and where to find the best percentage . . . He waits so long to realize his dreams that in the end it may be too late.
Jacqueline Susann's Valley of the Dolls was one of the sexiest, most shocking, and most sensational novels ever to fly off the shelves. Now, thanks to bestselling novelist Rae Lawrence — working from Susann's own draft for a sequel — the fun has just begun.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 23, 2001
      This tedious, tame sequel to Valley of the Dolls
      arrives 35 years after the original publishing phenomenon. Claiming to be based on a first draft by Susann (1921–1974), it certainly is aptly titled, as it languishes deep in the shadow of the original. Susann capitalized on readers' hunger for gossip by giving her fictional characters aspects of real-life celebrities, creating a thrilling guess-who puzzler featuring composites of Judy Garland, Ethel Merman and Dean Martin. Neither guessing games nor drug use (the other thrill of the original) play much of a role in Lawrence's novel. There's no sex either—not just by Susann standards, but even compared to a Regency romance. Seven times characters venture near a bed only to have the action abruptly skip over the deed with "Afterwards..." ("...he lit a cigarette"/ "...they turned the television back on"/ "...he brought her a fresh glass of water"). Fans of the rough and tumble, blunt but addictive prose and plotting of Susann's original will find this rambling series of episodes (there's not enough drive to pull them into anything resembling a plot) lacking. Neely, Anne and Lyon are all back (burdened with dull teenage kids), but the pseudonymous Lawrence has no idea what to do with them. Most of the notable events take place between chapters (Neely wins an Oscar for playing arch-rival Helen Lawson in a big-screen biopic, Anne and Lyon divorce, Neely aborts Lyon's child). Susann's original (reissued by Grove in 1997) still packs a wallop; the sequel is a pulled punch. (June 26)Forecast:Lawrence and
      Valley of the Dolls are both record breakers: the former received a top advance for her 1987 debut,
      Satisfaction, and the latter has sold a historical 30 million copies (and still sells 2,000–4,000 copies a month for Grove). Nevertheless, the two aren't going very far together. Susann is still a camp/cult favorites, but two lackluster biopics (
      Isn't She Great and TV's
      Scandalous Me) haven't heralded a revival. This novel will be get a lot of press coverage, and will be much talked about, but poor word-of-mouth will dampen sales. Expect a hit, but not a major one.

    • Library Journal

      February 15, 2001
      Just what you've been waiting for a sequel to Valley of the Dolls. The author of the best-selling Satisfaction has, shall we say, fleshed out the screenplay Susann left at her death. Appropriate beach fiction: it's set in the steamy Hamptons.

      Copyright 2001 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      April 1, 2001
      \deflang1033\pard\plain\f3\fs24 Those who weren't around when Jackie Susann's \plain\f3\fs24" Valley of the Dolls\plain\f3\fs24 came out may not understand what a publishing phenomenon it was. Yes, it was a runaway best-seller, and, yes, it became the model for thousands of trashy commercial novels that followed in its wake, but \plain\f3\fs24" Valley \plain\f3\fs24 was also fresh, outrageous, and wickedly funny--all the things this paper-cutout version is not. Based on Susann's first-draft screenplay, the story, which features characters from \plain\f3\fs24" Valley\plain\f3\fs24, was fleshed into a novel by Lawrence, herself a best-selling novelist. She does a credible job of following the Susann format, but the problem here is that what was shocking in the 1960s just seems silly now. Speaking of the '60s, Lawrence plays with the original time frame. This book starts in 1987, but the characters are only 10 years older than when last seen. They would be Neely O'Hara, the weight-watching singing legend and pill popper, and Anne Welles, former model, future TV host, and pill popper. A new character is her teenage daughter, Jenn, fashion model and pill popper. There's not much to say about the plot other than everything that happens is expected, and almost nothing happens that isn't. The sex scenes are earnest; an Abercrombie and Fitch catalog is hotter. If Lawrence's version has one thing in common with the original, it's that the flow of dialogue still turns the pages. But this book is finally like a Cher impersonator: no matter how dead-on the trappings may be, you know you're not dealing with the real thing. (Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2001, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      June 15, 2001
      In 1966, Jacqueline Susann's Valley of the Dolls was a scandalous must-read that introduced us to ambitious, young, single women in New York City, a glamorous world of fame and drugs. Nearly 40 years later, Lawrence (Satisfaction) has adapted a first draft that Susann wrote before her death in 1974 to provide a sequel to the original story. Beginning in 1987, the novel opens with the words "Whatever happened to Anne Wells?" Fans of Valley of the Dolls will enjoy reading about Anne and Neely O'Hara and Lyon Burke and their teenage children although, surprisingly, the main characters are only ten years older than in the original book. The drugs have been updated to Percoset and Xanax, and plastic surgery is every woman's friend. Anne has to start over after leaving Lyon, who lost all of their money in a stock scheme. Neely's out of rehab and ready for a comeback and a new husband. Lawrence manages to stay true to the tone of Susann's novel and has once again captured the emptiness and loneliness of the characters' lives. A major publicity tour will help generate interest in this sequel, but will readers still be interested in these characters? For large public libraries. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 2/15/01.] Kathy Ingels Helmond, Indianapolis-Marion Cty. P.L.

      Copyright 2001 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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