Dance with the Devil, Novel
From Publisher's Weekly:
Fans of silver screen legend Douglas ( The Ragman's Son ) are bound to
enjoy his credible fiction debut, a sometimes spellbinding, solidly
commercial tale of Hollywood producer Danny Dennison, who as a boy is the
only one of his family to survive a Nazi concentration camp. The orphaned
youngster locks the secret of this Jewish birthright deep within him, where
it festers for decades, distancing him from those he loves. By age 55,
Danny has lost interest in the moneymaking films he churns out, and has
reaped a bitter harvest from the dissolution of his joyless marriage to a
wealthy alcoholic whose powerful father intends to destroy Danny's career.
Enter young, sensual Luba, the quintessential whore with a heart of
gold--which she naturally saves for Danny despite his inexplicable surges
of anger and cold withdrawal. Luba reawakens all Danny's desires, including
a hunger to redeem himself as an artist and a Jew. Douglas acquits himself
well when liming the complicated mix of love and need that binds Luba and
her mother Magda, but relies on cliches to put flesh on most other
characters, including Danny himself and his crass agent and buddy Milt.
Nonetheless, this is highly readable, entertaining drama. Literary Guild
dual selection. (June) -Publisher's Weekly
From Library Journal:
Readers of Douglas's autobiography, The Ragman's Son (LJ 10/15/88), will
speculate on the parallels in his first novel, which also chronicles the
rise to fame of a Russian-Jewish emigre in Hollywood moviedom. The first
half of the book alternates chapters about Moishe, who becomes director
Danny Dennison, with the story of Luba, a Polish refugee who uses sex as a
survival tool. She is a London prostitute when she first encounters the
successful but unhappy protagonist, and he is at once captivated by her
honest charm and the stories she tells about her hardknocks past. Luba
makes Danny realize that he has prostituted his talent and denied a
long-suppressed secret. This awkward attempt at fiction is devoid of both
style and substance, but public libraries should anticipate high demand
from the legion of Douglas's fans. Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ
2/15/90.--Will Hepfer, SUNY at Buffalo Libs. -Library Journal