Dreamland |
Review by |
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The Saturday Evening Post, 25 May 1935 - 29 June 1935 |
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Harper: New York, 1935 |
June 2011 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The dream of self-improvement This easy novel, the romantic comedy Dreamland by Clarence Budington Kelland, is rather fun, but slight — yet on an important level it succeeds better than some of its more thoughtful and better-constructed siblings from Kelland's pen. How can this be? Let's look first at what's doing in Dreamland, and then compare it briefly to several other Kelland novels. Most simply, Dreamland is an amusement park in a midsize city, brand new and almost ready to open. Through an odd but reasonable chain of events, Hadrian Pink, a bright and healthy young fellow but quite the milquetoast, finds himself thrust into the job of general manager of the amusement park. In addition to knowing virtually nothing about running a park, he also needs to get the business safely open and popular, with very little lead time. Pink's driving motivation is to somehow win the hand of a girl, Ariadne Joyce, a rich socialite and model whom he worships from afar but never has met: generally an insuperable challenge even for non-milquetoasts. She has publicized her standards, defining the challenge:
And so on. Ariadne Joyce has set quite a high hurdle! Hadrian Pink's thoughtful introspection, combined with his distant infatuation, impels him to an act perhaps as foolish as his love itself. Risking a dollar (worth much more in those days), he sends away for a booklet titled "Mouse or Man" from an outfit called Character Builders, Inc. Over the ensuing months he practices character-building, quite in private, as the instructions advise. Then comes an odd confluence of events, including a murder mystery, gangsters, and the opportunity at Dreamland. Some quick comparisons. I doubt that Clarence Budington Kelland wrote Dreamland aiming at a target as ambitious as, say, his Gold (1931), Archibald the Great (1942), or Merchant of Valor (1947). These are more serious novels, although Archibald the Great has plenty of fun with character and wordplay. Yet there is something lacking in each.
In all four of these novels, the protagonists are substantially powered and hampered by romantic yearning. This motivation is fine, and even more common in the slick-magazine tradition that Kelland swam in with considerable success, than in the pulp-magazine tradition. In all the novels the protagonists are helped by friends and allies they make, as well as thwarted by enemies, the ignorant, and the inertia-bound. This is what makes most plots. I also want to mention a movie, Strike Me Pink (1936), loosely based on Dreamland, with Eddie Cantor and Ethel Merman. In the Hollywood tradition, the special strengths of the story as written mostly are swapped out for hijinks, chase scenes, and some ill-fitting songs. What makes Dreamland different from the above novels (and the movie) is that the hero tries to grab ahold of his own character, improve who he is and thus shape his own destiny. Yes, his starting point is that of milquetoast, and for all he knows, that is his basic and unalterable nature. Sure, he must deal with helpful and thwartful people aplenty. Of course, there are surprises thick and fast, both good and bad and often quite amusing. But amidst all this — Hadrian Pink has something which Kelland's protagonists in those more thoughtful and sophisticated novels do not. He may be outrageously optimistic, foolish in love and foolhardy in action, but he has a goal for his life and he takes a grip on it. He works at lucid dreaming. Or in words of my own motto, They who make, may find. For all its lightness of touch, Dreamland has a spine.
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© 2011 Robert Wilfred Franson |
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Mentality at Troynovant |
Romance at Troynovant |
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