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The Spiral Path (2002)

by Mary Jo Putney

Other authors: See the other authors section.

Series: Circle of Friends (2)

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1796153,730 (3.73)4
Fiction. Romance. HTML:

The second contemporary novel by New York Times bestselling author, The Spiral Path sweeps from the distant mountains of New Mexico to the rolling hills of the English countryside in a story of love, loss, reconciliationâ??and the hard work of making movies.

For years, Kenzie Scott was everything to Raine Marloweâ??the friend she turned to for courage and comfort, the lover who touched the hidden depths of her heart, the husband she adored but never really knew. Even as their marriage disintegrates into a civilized divorce, he helps her achieve her dream of becoming a director by agreeing to play the lead in The Centurion, the movie she has dreamed of making for years.

Rainey knows the role of the mysterious, tortured hero is perfect for Kenzieâ??but he fears that the character's dark secrets may be dangerously close to his own. When filming begins, he realizes that he must make peace with the tragic past he has buried for yearsâ??or lose the one woman he will love for all… (more)

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» See also 4 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 6 (next | show all)
Kenzie Scott has a secret and when his soon to be ex-wife convinces him to take a role in the movie she is directing things get bad quickly. Something in his past haunts him and the damaged character that he plays is bringing the painful past front and center.
Mary Jo Putney has done an amazing job of keeping the reader wondering about what his secret is and feeling the pain when it is revealed. ( )
  ddeluna1 | Mar 19, 2020 |
Mary Jo Putney proves that she does not need to writing a period romance to have a powerful story with compelling characters. I was surprised at how moving this book was, especially the last few chapters. ( )
  ClosetWryter | Mar 3, 2014 |
It made me want to get a labyrnth ( )
  Kaetrin | Aug 13, 2012 |
Well, that was a shot in the dark! I don't normally read 'romances' - and now the reasons are many, and all too painfully clear - but I couldn't resist the references to The Scarlet Pimpernel in this hokey novel, and so decided to cast taste to the wind. I was not rewarded for my bravery.

Is the whole genre this unrealistic and corny? All the characters look great, have stacks of money, are the best in the field at whatever they do, overcome cliched obstacles - I noted child abuse, rape, paedophilia, emotionally withdrawn parents and absent fathers, and that was just the H and h - before living Happily Ever After in Romancelandia. And the reader is simply told all of this, and forced to accept the author's word - no insightful interactions or subtle dialogue. The H, Kenzie Scott - and I forgot to add unbelievable names to the list - is an award-winning, naturally talented actor, who is stunningly good-looking but not vain, loaded but generous (he gives to charities and patronises disabled children - 'There are jobs that can be done from a wheelchair'), and - of course - a Tortured Soul (TM). Yes, Kenzie has issues, more issues in fact than IMDb credits or zeroes in his bank account, and they are big, life-stunting SERIOUS issues. So basically, Kenzie is overly sensitive, selfish, and spends most of the novel whining. He doesn't need a wife, he needs a mother figure or a counsellor, which is handy because Rainey (Rainbow!), his almost ex, is quite happy to be just that. Does he want comfort sex? OK, no strings. He doesn't want sex, he can't handle the intimacy? That's cool, Rainey will settle for spooning and soothing his fevered brow.

Raine Marlowe, in case you were wondering, is an equally famous actress, who now wants to direct her first movie (a Lawrence of Arabia period piece about a traumatised soldier), and turns out to be a first-rate, ball-busting director too. Only all the descriptions of Raine artificially supplied by the author - strong, tough, determined, independent, etc. - don't actually apply. At one point, Raine in all honesty ponders why the 'self-sacrificing nature' of Sarah, the Victorian heroine in her film project that only Raine can possibly play, should irritate her so much. And I was thinking, because your own behaviour towards Kenzie is not self-sacrificing - or irritating? Who is kidding who?

The plot is also overflowing with happy coincidences - the New Mexico retreat Kenzie falls in love with is miraculously for sale, the lead actress of Raine's film drops out at the last minute - and trite solutions to devastating issues. (I hate when real-life traumas become fashionable angst in novels.) Kenzie finds peace by plotting out his own labyrinth, to follow the 'spiral path' to closure, then 'journalling' his inner feelings, and Raine even randomly recites a psalm at one point! When everything turned out right at the end, complete with the mother of all Oscar acceptance speeches, I felt I had been force-fed so much sugar that my teeth were rotting.

Oh, yes, The Scarlet Pimpernel. I appreciated the nod to the 1982 film version with Anthony Andrews ('Why another remake?'), and the fact that Raine has 'apricot' hair like Marguerite ("This red-gold is your natural colour?"), but Kenzie and Raine are far, far from Sir Percy and Marguerite - and most especially Benedick and Beatrice, whom they also play on stage - and Mary-Jo Putney is not a patch on Baroness Orczy when it comes to romance and troubled heroes. ( )
  AdonisGuilfoyle | May 4, 2012 |
To put it mildly, The Spiral Path was hard to put down.

It was painful reading in parts, because MJP made me feel quite vividly for Raine. Her marriage is falling apart, her husband seems determined to let it fall apart, and she doesn't know why.

When we get to the why, it's heartbreaking. I don't want to spoil it for anyone who hasn't read it, so I won't elaborate, but once Raine finds out why Kenzie has avoided intimacy, she has to confront her own lack of emotional commitment as well.

Wonderful story of two emotionally flawed people who learn to face their pasts and heal old wounds together.

Loved the labyrinth--the spiral path of the title. I'm thinking that might be just the thing for the big bare spot in the backyard. I'm curious to see if it really works.

And there's also the insider's view of movie making, which gave me even more appreciation for the art of filmmaking, and made the existence of movies like The Impostor even more incomprehensible. But that's another story.
  Darla | Nov 18, 2008 |
Showing 1-5 of 6 (next | show all)
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Mary Jo Putneyprimary authorall editionscalculated
Rosenblat, BarbaraNarratorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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Broad Beach, California
Spring, Present Day

The trouble with reality was that it was so damned so real.
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Fiction. Romance. HTML:

The second contemporary novel by New York Times bestselling author, The Spiral Path sweeps from the distant mountains of New Mexico to the rolling hills of the English countryside in a story of love, loss, reconciliationâ??and the hard work of making movies.

For years, Kenzie Scott was everything to Raine Marloweâ??the friend she turned to for courage and comfort, the lover who touched the hidden depths of her heart, the husband she adored but never really knew. Even as their marriage disintegrates into a civilized divorce, he helps her achieve her dream of becoming a director by agreeing to play the lead in The Centurion, the movie she has dreamed of making for years.

Rainey knows the role of the mysterious, tortured hero is perfect for Kenzieâ??but he fears that the character's dark secrets may be dangerously close to his own. When filming begins, he realizes that he must make peace with the tragic past he has buried for yearsâ??or lose the one woman he will love for all

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First seen as minor characters in my previous contemporary romance, The Burning Point, Raine Marlowe and Kenzie Scott obviously cared deeply for each other, yet by the time The Spiral Path begins, they’re getting a divorce. Raine—Rainey to her close friends—is intense, talented, and determined to succeed in a world that destroyed her mother, a famous rock singer.

After her marriage implodes, Rainey desperately wants to direct a movie that will give her creative control over a Victorian story that means a great deal to her. She needs financial backing to make her picture—and her soon-to-be-ex-husband is one of the most bankable stars in Hollywood.

Kenzie is British, handsome, charming, and famously secretive about his past. On the surface he and Rainey are very different, yet when they met, they were drawn together with the inevitability of opposite magnetic poles. But love wasn’t enough when secrets and demanding careers came between them.

Knowing he’ll regret it, Kenzie agrees to star in Rainey’s movie, and the two of them come together in the pressure cooker that is movie making. Their weeks shooting in New Mexico and England will strip them to the marrow emotionally, work them both to exhaustion, and maybe—just maybe—allow them to forge a relationship so strong that it will never crack again.
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