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Closing
In by
Kerry Blair
Reviewed
by Jennie Hansen
“Pay
careful heed to the beginning of this story,” Libby James read aloud,
“for when we get to the end of it we shall know more than we do
now about love and greed and the ice that can freeze in our hearts.”
Beginning each chapter with a quote from one of Hans Christian Andersen’s
classic fairy tales, Kerry Blair tells a tale of love and greed
that is far from a children’s fairy tale. With her flair for humor
she not only keeps the suspense high, but keeps the reader laughing
as well.
The stage is
set for Closing In in a small Arizona town called Amen where
Elizabeth Jamison, “one of the richest, most powerful women in corporate
America” has retreated anonymously after the yacht accident that
killed her parents. Here in this town, her ancestors settled, Elizabeth
Jamison is plain Libby James, school librarian. She continues to
run the business she inherited when her parents died via Internet
connections and by frequent flights back to Los Angeles. She also
stays in close touch with her niece whom she adores; her sister,
Geneva and Geneva’s husband, Frank; and Uncle Leo. Both her brother-in-law,
Frank Gordon, and Uncle Leo help her to run the corporation.
Captain David
Rogers, a Navy pilot and astronaut, is in Amen on a secret mission
for the government. Someone is selling missile designs to terrorists
and the government suspects Elizabeth Jamison, CEO of Jamison enterprises,
a major supplier to the US government defense system. To enable
him to watch “Libby”, a job is arranged for him at the same school
where Ms. Jamison serves as librarian. David has no clue how to
teach sixth-graders, and every attempt he makes to get close to
Libby goes wrong. Though he has a reputation for being a ladies’
man and possesses a surplus of good-looks and charm, he can’t persuade
Libby to go out with him. Everyone in town adores her and he can’t
get anywhere with his investigation because no one has anything
negative to say about her. Complicating his job, David is a member
of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and so is Libby.
As luck would have it, the principal of the small school where they
are both employed is also their bishop who knows both their secrets
and he is constantly throwing them together. The principal/bishop
assigns Libby to help David gain control of his class. He also places
both Libby and David in youth leadership positions in the small
ward which requires them to cooperate with each other on reactivation
and service projects. Before long David is working harder to clear
and protect Libby than to prove her guilt.
Though Closing
In is a serious tale of espionage with a strong suspense element,
it’s a great deal more. Kerry Blair has a tremendous talent for
humor. In the midst of spies and espionage and a serious story concerning
greed and betrayal, Blair makes her readers laugh by presenting
Estelle, Libby’s neighbor, who keeps watches by both land and air
with a powerful telescope that doesn’t miss much, for the returning
Ten Tribes. Estelle is convinced the missing tribes are on another
planet and they will return in space ships. She is so prepared for
their return, that she has twenty packets of cherry Kool Aid and
ten pounds of sugar along with a freezer full of cookies to serve
the “Brethren” when they arrive. There’s also LaRae Flake who tries
to win David’s affection by serving him gopher stew. Her mother
and sisters, all with La-something names, run a restaurant. It is,
in fact, the only restaurant in town and it serves a lot of original
dishes which makes the prospect of taking a date to dinner ludicrous.
Humor is sadly
lacking as a genre in LDS fiction; there just isn’t much of it.
Both Robert Farrell Smith and Joni Hilton write delightfully silly
humor; Robert Kirby and Pat Bagley contribute cartoons, and James
Arrington has a unique style all his own, but that is about as far
as the number of LDS humor writers go. There are a few others, but
they haven’t risen to the kind of prominence that easily brings
their names to mind when an LDS reader thinks humor. Since it has
been my experience that members of the Church enjoy a wide range
of humor styles, I find it strange that we are not producing more
humor writers. Possibly because writers and publishers take the
gospel very seriously, they feel a reluctance to poke fun at the
everyday foibles of members or of issues closely associated with
the Church. Several suspense fiction writers add a bit of humor
to break the tension at critical points, but only Kerry Blair and
Betsy Green seem able to sustain humor throughout their books while
effectively telling a love story or suspense tale without making
the major plot appear silly. It’s an effective style that clearly
carves a niche in the market for these two talented writers.
Hans Christian
Andersen’s fairy tales have entertained children for many years,
but the messages behind his tales reach far beyond childhood. Sister
Blair uses key passages from well-known classics such as The
Snow Queen to relate effectively to the problems her characters
face. In the process, she gives her readers an opportunity to examine
these quotations in a way that invites some self-evaluation.
Preceding each
chapter with a quotation or bit of poetry was a popular style fifty
and more years ago, but is not used so often anymore. Yet when it
is done well, it still is an effective way to build the reader’s
anticipation of what is to come. They cut out large pieces of
air with their big tailor’s scissors. They sewed away with needles
that had no thread in them. At last they said, “Look! The Clothes
are ready!” Once a person has read The Emperor’s New Clothes,
the story is never forgotten. Sister Blair heads a chapter with
this quotation and we immediately start watching the following pages
for someone who sees only what he is expected to see; not what really
is. Each of her well-chosen quotes hints at what is to come, becomes
part of the puzzle, and adds to the intrigue and the enjoyment of
Closing In.
Closing
In is Kerry Blair’s fourth novel and it is totally different
from her “Heart” series. Readers who enjoyed that series will love
this book, too, as will the readers who choose the immensely popular
romantic suspense novels that have appeared during the past few
years.
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