Book Review: Jeff Zentner's latest YA novel is a B-movie-themed delight

Photo by J. Hernandez / Jeff Zentner
Photo by J. Hernandez / Jeff Zentner

"RAYNE & DELILAH'S MIDNITE MATINEE," by Jeff Zentner (Crown Books for Young Readers, 400 pages, $18).

It's 11 p.m. on a Saturday night in Jackson, Tennessee. You're flipping through the channels. Rerun, rerun, local news. You stop clicking as you pass local-access channel 6, surprised to see two teenage girls in gothy makeup (think mall goth, not corpse paint) who are laughing hysterically at a basset hound in a suit. Col. Buford T. Rutherford B. Hayes is being held up by his front paws as he marries a beagle named Magnolia P. Sugarbottom. The beagle has agreed to the marriage on the promise of unlimited chicken livers, and the show ends in a dance party complete with karate kicks and a back flip.

The fictional teen stars of the show are Rayne Ravenscroft and Delilah Darkwood - known in their non-TV life as Josie and Delia - and they are also the stars of "Rayne & Delilah's Midnite Matinee" by Nashville YA author Jeff Zentner.

These two friends are connected on a seemingly astral level, but Delia and Josie come from very different homes. Delia lives in a trailer with her mother, a psychic who works at Target on the side. Abandoned by her father when she was 7, Delia maintains a connection with him, of sorts, by way of a library of B-movie horror films he left behind.

Josie lives with two parents and a sister in a middle-class home. She dreams of a career in television after high school, but when her parents offer to arrange an internship with the Food Network in Knoxville, on the other side of the state, Josie thinks of all she must leave behind - namely, "Midnite Matinee" and Delia.

Delia's dream of bringing the show to wider audiences leads her to reach out to horror legend Jack Divine, who agrees to grant her a meeting if she and Josie can make it down to ShiverCon - in Florida. When Delia learns that her estranged father lives in Florida, too, she struggles to know whether to look for him or continue the radio silence between them.

photo Photo by Crown Books for Young Readers / "Rayne & Delilah's Midnite Matinee"

Unbeknownst to Delia, Josie's parents allow the trip to ShiverCon on one condition: If expansion plans for "Midnite Matinee" don't work out, she must move to Knoxville and take the internship. But Delia isn't the only one Josie is reluctant to leave: She has just started dating Lawson, a mixed-martial-arts fighter and pop-country fan who surprises her with his secret love for reading. As Delia watches the two of them growing closer, she feels the abandonment of her past creeping into her present. If things don't go right at ShiverCon, what will she have left?

In many ways, "Rayne & Delilah's Midnite Matinee" is far lighter than the author's other award-winning books, "The Serpent King" (winner of the 2017 Morris Award) and "Goodbye Days." It feels a lot like a gothy Southern "Gilmore Girls." But lighter, in this case, in no way implies "shallow." Zentner perfectly captures that magical time in high school when you have almost-adult reasoning power, few adult responsibilities and a lot of free time. In other words, the perfect conditions for friendship.

For more local book coverage, visit Chapter16.org, an online publication of Humanities Tennessee.

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