Imagine if Nancy Drew had grown up in South Dakota, hid out in college for eight years without earning a degree and then accompanied her grandfather and two of his lecherous friends to an RV park in Arizona so that they could hook up with senior citizen internet floozies. Oh yeah, and imagine further that Nancy Drew looks smoking hot in a pair of Daisy Dukes and knows how to weld. You would be just scratching the surface of the highly entertaining world of Dance of the Winnebagos by Ann Charles, Corvallis Press, 2011, Amazon ASIN: B005VKQIUK.
Dance of the Winnebagos, is first and foremost a very fun read. Once you get twenty pages in, you are going to want to read it straight through. I read it over two days and was quite disappointed when it came to an end (but encouraged to learn that there will be a sequel). The narrative voice and the dialogue are loaded with witty banter, the characters are colorful and it is a mystery story in earnest that really is the adult version of a Nancy-Drew-on-steroids mystery set in an RV park.
Ann Charles shows us many signs that she is an accomplished story teller. First, she introduces us to characters like Manny and Chester who are oversexed retirees whose adolescent commentary on women and sex would make a teenage boy blush. Their vulgarity and political incorrectness makes you cringe every time either one of them contributes to dialogue. At first, it seems almost unbelievable that any self-respecting young woman like the main character, Claire, the thirty-three year old granddaughter of Harley, would even tolerate this kind of sexual commentary, much of which is directed at her, from her grandfather's friends. Her grandfather is not much better having dormitory-style rules regulating when Claire may or may not come into the Winnebago in the evenings while he is entertaining a lady friend. But over the course of the story, you find yourself not only getting used to these guys with the same good humor that Claire does, but they become kind of likable. Of course, this requires the reader to descend into the consciousness of the RV park and truly become part of the culture of Jackrabbit Junction.
Another way in which Charles shows off her story-telling prowess is by giving the reader an unlikely, but highly engaging heroine. She feeds us details of the inner workings of Claire's mind by the series of cartoon characters that appear on her heroine's tee shirts as the story unfolds and her amazing relationship to junk food. We are told that Claire has quit smoking and yet we are taunted by Claire's repeated temptation to smoke throughout the book to the point that even if you have never smoked in your life, you are left feeling like you really need a cigarette.
Of course, the author uses sexual tension between Claire and Mac, the geologist nephew of Ruby, the owner of the RV park, to propel both character development and the suspense of the story line. Their relationship develops into a raging passion that gives Dance of the Winnebagos a romance novel component that will not disappoint fans of that genre. Charles flirts with, but ultimately avoids stereotypes to give us characters that are real and lovable. We are introduced to the villain of the story early on, but come to at least appreciate her character with some empathy despite her heinous deeds. This story is not so much a "who-dunnit" as a "why'd-she-do-it" that does not compromise on suspense or action.
In some ways, Charles is reprising a less exotic version of Indiana Jones. Claire tells us that Mac even looks a bit like the young "Han Solo". The mystery unfolds as the characters explore mines that Mac's aunt Ruby is about to lose to the bank unless Claire and Mac can find a way to save them. The real mystery centers on the question of why there is a treasure in the first place, a detail that would have been overlooked if Claire had not been a fan of the television program The Antiques Roadshow. It is the presence of Louis XIV armoires in Jackrabbit Junction that gives the story its uniqueness and its many plot twists.
Ann Charles has given us some quality reading entertainment with Dance of the Winnebagos. Her portrayal of springtime in Arizona, especially the details that she provides about the birds of the area, provides as good a backdrop as any for a mystery. Regardless of your cultural orientation, you will be lured into the RV park at Jackrabbit Junction and you will want to stay for a while.