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Title: THE CALL HOUSE: A WASHINGTON NOVEL
Author: C.P. Stiles
Publisher: Bacon Press Books
Pages: 204
Genre: Literary Fiction
A war on vice In Washington, DC—a city constantly awash in scandals? Hard to believe, but it really happened. Only not exactly the way it’s told here.
All Mattie Simon
knows is that she want adventure and her hometown doesn’t have any. She
wants independence, maybe some romance.
All Andrew Stevens wants is to do his job as a newly-elected congressman.
But Washington has a way of changing people—even when they get what they want.
Fast-paced and funny, The Call House
takes you back to a time of relative innocence, when people flocked to
Washington, DC, in the 1940s to do good works and instead got caught up
in sex, money, and
politics. What else would you expect?
politics. What else would you expect?
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Book Excerpt:
THE war changed everything. But that was later.
This was February 1941, and Washington had yet to become the city it was meant to be. Nation’s capital? World capital? If you’d visited Paris or London, if you’d been to Boston or New York, then you knew Washington was still a small Southern town. Provincial and unsophisticated.
But
if you were elected to Congress from Muskegon, Michigan, or Carbondale,
Illinois, if you came looking for work from Greensboro, North Carolina,
or Smyrna, Tennessee—Washington was the biggest goddamn city in the
world. A Mecca
for men of ambition. A refuge for women who refused to marry. And the
closest thing to the Promised Land for anyone out of a job.
Ambitious
and earnest, unmarried and adventurous, people poured in on trains and
buses, crowding each other out of rooms in rundown boarding houses and
bumping up against one another at night in the smoky bars on Capitol
Hill or down on F Street where Negroes weren’t allowed to take a seat
unless they could play the piano.
It was February 1941—boys were men, women were girls, and everyone was more innocent than they’d ever be again.
But
Mattie Simon didn’t know any of that when she stepped off the train in
Union Station, wearing a navy poplin shirtwaist dress with a white
collar and matching navy-blue pumps. She carried a smooth cardboard
suitcase tied together with rough twine.
All Mattie knew was she wanted adventure and her hometown didn’t have any. She’d been bored with Smyrna as far back as third grade.
She
had forty-seven dollars in a white handkerchief pinned inside her slip,
and the addresses and phone numbers for the Red Cross and the YWCA
tucked inside her purse. But somewhere on the train ride up she lost her
nerve. In town ten minutes and already she was homesick. It wasn’t at
all what she imagined.
The
vast marble and granite station was cold and crowded with men in heavy
overcoats and broad-brimmed hats, women in dark tight-fitting suits and
high-heels, sailors and soldiers and cops all in uniforms of their own.
Mattie shielded her eyes against the late afternoon sun
and tried to get her bearings, but the crowd pushed her along toward the exit. She felt her right ankle turn funny. She lost her balance.
and tried to get her bearings, but the crowd pushed her along toward the exit. She felt her right ankle turn funny. She lost her balance.
Before she fell flat on her face, a sailor grabbed her by the arm.
“Good thing I was here to save you, sweet stuff.” He was short and red-faced, with mean little eyes.
“Thank you.” She smelled liquor and peppermint, cheap cologne, and hair pomade.
“You really want to thank me, baby doll, you can let me buy you a drink.”
“Wish I could,” she said, “But I’m . . .”
“Scared?”
Well, it turned out she was.
“Just not interested. I’ve got a fella back home.” And wouldn’t her momma have been happy if it had been true.
“And
I’ve got a girl in sixteen ports. But right now, baby doll, all we’ve
got is each other.” He tightened his grip on Mattie’s arm. She tried to
pull away.
“Maybe you didn’t understand me. I just want to show you a good time.”
In
the back seat of the sleek black sedan circling Union Station, Flo
Maxwell leaned forward. She tapped her driver on the shoulder.
“Sam, did you see that? A tall young woman in a blue coat. Looks like she could use some help. Circle again.”
“Will do,” Sam said. “But there’s a cop on the corner hoping for trouble. Be careful.”
The
sailor pressed his body against Mattie’s as they waited for a break in
the traffic. She wriggled away.“Easy now, you don’t want to make a fuss.
I’m just going to take you across the street to meet my buddies. Bet you never heard of a joyride where you came from.”
I’m just going to take you across the street to meet my buddies. Bet you never heard of a joyride where you came from.”
The
sleek black sedan stopped right in front of them. Air horns blared as
Flo stepped out of the car. She wore a fur coat dark as the waters of
the Potomac
River. Her hair was the color of coal, her lipstick so red it made her teeth sparkle impossibly white. She walked right up to Mattie.
River. Her hair was the color of coal, her lipstick so red it made her teeth sparkle impossibly white. She walked right up to Mattie.
“There
you are, darling. I’ve been looking all over for you,” she said loud
enough for the cop to hear. She towered over the sailor.
“What the—”
She pushed him aside and gave Mattie a hug.
“Why I was worried half to death I’d missed you, and here you were all along.”
“Here I am.” Mattie was still shaking.
“Look
at you, you’re shivering. I could have sworn I told your momma to make
sure you packed a heavy coat. Never mind. Let’s get you home.” She put
her arm around Mattie and steered her toward the car.
“Hey, what about me?” the sailor called
after them. “Don’t I get some kind of reward? I’m the one who found her.”
after them. “Don’t I get some kind of reward? I’m the one who found her.”
“Keep walking,” Flo said.
Sam
held open the door to the sedan. He took Mattie’s cardboard suitcase,
handling it as carefully as if it were real leather, and put it on the
front seat. He waited until Mattie settled herself in back, then closed
the door.
“Thank you,” Mattie said. “I swear I think you saved my life.”
“Hush, honey. No one’s going to hurt you while I’m around. New to town?”
Mattie straightened her collar, smoothed her skirt. “Does it show that much?”
Flo sat back and took stock. The clothes were dreadful, but she’d seen worse. Slim ankles, shapely legs, a trim waist.
Could anyone tell what was hidden beneath her boxy poplin dress? A long graceful neck. A nearly perfectly heart-shaped face. And wasn’t there just a hint of mischief behind those wide hazel eyes? A touch of naughty mixed in with all that nice?
Could anyone tell what was hidden beneath her boxy poplin dress? A long graceful neck. A nearly perfectly heart-shaped face. And wasn’t there just a hint of mischief behind those wide hazel eyes? A touch of naughty mixed in with all that nice?
“If I had to bet money,” Flo said, “I’d bet you’ll look like you’ve lived here your whole life in no time.”
Mattie smiled—that was just what she wanted to hear.
“Sam, I’m guessing this young lady is headed over to the YWCA. Let’s swing past there and drop her off.”
“Sure
thing.” Sam caught Flo’s eye in the mirror. “Hope she’s got a
reservation. You know they’ve been turning people away these past few
months.”
“Reservation?
I didn’t know I needed one.” Mattie fumbled in her purse for the slip
of paper. “All I’ve got is their address and phone number.”
“Tell
you what.” Flo removed one of her long black leather gloves and patted
Mattie’s hand. “Why don’t you come on home with me tonight? I’ve got an
extra room.”
“I hate to trouble you.”
“No trouble at all.”
Flo studied her again. Mattie had one of those smiles that lit up her face with a lifetime of secret hopes.
“Just sit back and relax,” Flo said. “Everything will be fine now.”
About the Author
C.P. Stiles lives and writes in Washington, DC. The Call House: A Washington Novel is her first published novel, but she has a drawerful of new novels just waiting to be published.
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Washington, what's the first thing you think? Politics and scandals. Would it ever occur to you that a war of vice would take place? Well it actually did, but not quite the way it's told here.
The setting is a very nice apartment building in a rather upscale neighborhood, on Connecticut Avenue, there is on the top floor a very discreet operation, a high dollar call house, in the 1940's. Things were going quite well, that is, until the DC Police and the FBI are trying to be the first to win a war on vice.
The author wrote a book that read at a nice clip and has humor to back it up. The author did a rather unusual thing, having the setting and the main character being the one and the same. The author writes with very good detail from the main character, Washington to the other characters and their surroundings.
Washington is rather famous then and now, of making people different, different from what they were when they arrived. The author gives a good clean and yet humorous look into Washington and world that it is. The characters are so real and you find them fascinating. A very innocent small town girl from Tennessee, who wants a taste of that adventure, going into a big city full of very important people. Then we have a congressman who has just been elected, whose main goal is to represent the people and his country. Our third character is very unlikely, a cop and you wonder what he's doing there. We get a taste of Washington then, when the scandals were very small compared to today. Is this where it all started? You'll wonder a little bit why you're smiling as you're reading. Scandals, they don't go away, they just grow and grow. And what a place to start, Washington. A peak into how it may have all started. Now it's full blown.
I was given a complimentary copy of this book from the author and PUYB and voluntarily decided to review it.
I would give this book 4 STARS.
Media Contact:
Dorothy Thompson
Pump Up Your Book
P.O. Box 643
Chincoteague Island, Virginia 23336
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1 comment:
Thank you for the thoughtful review and for being part of this blog tour.
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