The Blue Star: A Novel

The Blue Star: A Novel

by Tony Earley
The Blue Star: A Novel

The Blue Star: A Novel

by Tony Earley

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Overview

Seven years ago, readers everywhere fell in love with Jim Glass, the precocious ten-year-old at the heart of Tony Earley's bestseller Jim the Boy. Now a teenager, Jim returns in another tender and wise story of young love on the eve of World War Two. Jim Glass has fallen in love, as only a teenage boy can fall in love, with his classmate Chrissie Steppe. Unfortunately, Chrissie is Bucky Bucklaw's girlfriend, and Bucky has joined the Navy on the eve of war. Jim vows to win Chrissie's heart in his absence, but the war makes high school less than a safe haven, and gives a young man's emotions a grown man's gravity.

With the uncanny insight into the well-intentioned heart that made Jim the Boy a favorite novel for thousands of readers, Tony Earley has fashioned another nuanced and unforgettable portrait of America in another time -- making it again even realer than our own day. This is a timeless and moving story of discovery, loss and growing up, proving why Tony Earley's writing "radiates with a largeness of heart" (Esquire).

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780316029100
Publisher: Little, Brown and Company
Publication date: 03/10/2008
Sold by: Hachette Digital, Inc.
Format: eBook
File size: 667 KB

About the Author

Tony Earley is the author of the novels Jim the Boy and The Blue Star. His fiction has earned a National Magazine Award and appeared in The New YorkerHarper's, and Best American Short Stories. Earley was chosen for both The New Yorker's inaugural best "20 Under 40" list of fiction writers and Granta's "20 Best Young American Novelists." He lives with his family in Nashville, Tennessee, where he is the Samuel Milton Fleming Chair in English at Vanderbilt University.

Read an Excerpt


The Blue Star

By Tony Earley Little, Brown and Company
Copyright © 2008
Tony Earley
All right reserved.

ISBN: 978-0-316-19907-0


Chapter One At the Top

BECAUSE THEY were seniors and had earned the right, Jim and his buddies stood on the small landing at the top of the school steps, squarely in front of the red double doors. Every student entering the building, boy or girl, had to go around them to get inside. The boys pretended not to notice that they were in everyone else's way, and moved aside only when a teacher climbed the stairs. They had ruled Aliceville School for less than a month but now held this high ground more or less comfortably. The first few days of school, Jim had halfway expected some older boys to come along and tell them to get lost, but during the preceding three weeks, he had gradually come to appreciate that there were no older boys. He and his friends were it.

The school overlooked the town from atop a steep hill. Jim tilted his face slightly into the clear sunlight and tenderly considered the world below him. At the foot of the hill the houses and barns and sheds of Aliceville lay scattered around the town's small tangle of streets. Near the center of town the uncles' three tall houses stood shoulder to shoulder. (Jim lived with his mother and her oldest brother, Uncle Zeno, in the middle house. Uncle Coran and Uncle Al, who were twins, lived on either side.) Beyond the town itself, across the railroad track, the uncles' corn and cotton crops filled the sandy bottoms all the way to their arable edges; beyond the fields the neatly tended rows unraveled into the thick gnarl of woods through which the river snaked. The corn, still richly green, stood taller than any man, and the dark cotton rows were speckled with dots of bright, emerging white. West of town the engine smoke of an approaching train climbed into the sky.

Jim could not see Uncle Zeno or Uncle Al in the fields, nor Uncle Coran in the store, but he knew they were there, the same way he knew that when the time came to pick cotton they would not ask him to skip school to help. Just as he wondered what his mother was doing, Mama came out the front door of Uncle Zeno's house with a bucket and dipper and began watering the chrysanthemums blooming in the pots on the porch steps. She glanced at the orange bus from Lynn's Mountain as it turned off the state highway and ground its way up the pitched drive. Jim was glad she didn't look all the way up the hill toward the school. Had she seen him and waved, he not only would have been embarrassed, but he would also have been tempted to weep with some mysterious, nostalgic joy. The warm sunlight on his face seemed to remind him of something - but he couldn't explain what - and some vague but pleasant longing filled his chest. Already he could sense the end of these good days rapidly approaching, like a mail train filled with unexpected news.

"Hey, Jim," Buster Burnette said, "there's your mama."

Dennis Deane squinted as he looked down the hill. "What's she doing?"

"Daggum, Dennis Deane," Jim said. "You can't see a lick, can you?"

"I don't need to see," Dennis Deane said. "I've got an extra eyeball."

Everybody grinned, but nobody said anything. They all knew better.

Dennis Deane batted his eyes innocently. "Ain't you going to ask me where it is?"

Jim shook his head. "Ain't no way."

"Cowards," Dennis Deane sniffed. "The whole bunch of you." He cleared his throat. "Now, where was I?"

"The secrets of women," said Larry Lawter.

"Oh, yeah. Like I said, I know the secrets of women. I can make any female I want to fall in love with me."

"Bull," Buster said.

"I'm telling you," Dennis Deane said. "I'm the Large Possum. The King of the Squirrels."

"You're a nut is what you are," said Jim.

"The Head Nut," Dennis Deane said. "Twice as much for a nickel. Try me just once and you'll know why."

The bus grumbled to a stop at the bottom of the steps. The doors swung open and the students from Lynn's Mountain climbed off and curled around the front of the bus. In the distance the train announced itself at the state highway crossing with a long blast from its whistle. Jim wondered about the train because it was not one that was regularly scheduled. Like everyone else who lived in Aliceville, Jim knew the timetables of the trains and noted when they passed, even in his sleep.

"Prove it," Larry said. "What you said about women." He jerked his head toward the bus. "How about one of these mountain girls?"

"How about her?" Buster said, nodding at a freshman girl with green, shrewd-looking eyes who came around the front of the bus with her books clutched closely to her chest. A pack of third- and fourth-grade boys chattered by her and up the steps into the building. The girl did not look at the seniors on the landing, but Jim could tell she knew they were there.

Dennis Deane squinted again. "Who is it?" he asked. "What's her name?"

"Ellie," Buster said. "Ellie something."

"Okay," Dennis Deane said. "Ellie something. Watch and learn, boys."

When the girl reached the landing, Dennis Deane said, "Hey, Ellie Something." When she looked up, he closed his eyes and contorted his face into an enormous pucker. "Kiss me," he said.

Jim winced when he saw the stricken look on Ellie's face and stepped out of the way to aid her escape. She jerked open one of the doors and ran inside.

"You shouldn't have done that, Dennis Deane," he said, although, despite his better judgment, he laughed along with everybody else.

"I knew it wouldn't work," Buster said.

"Of course it worked," said Dennis Deane. "Ellie Something is now in love with me, although, bless her little heart, she would never, ever admit it. She's just too shy."

Otis Shehan and Horace Gentine climbed the steps and joined the group. The mountain boys were also seniors. "Howdy, men," Horace said. "How's it hanging?"

"Try it on her," Larry said, nodding toward Christine Steppe.

No, don't, Jim thought, but he didn't say anything. As far as Jim was concerned, watching Chrissie Steppe climb the stairway was the best part of the day. And because this information seemed valuable to him in some way he could not name, he had never told the other guys.

"Try what on her?" Otis asked. "I wouldn't try anything on her. That's Bucky Bucklaw's girl."

"I don't care if it's Franklin D. Roosevelt's girl," Dennis Deane said. "Hey. Chrissie Steppe. Kiss me." He squeezed his eyes shut and puckered up.

Chrissie stopped and her large, dark eyes blinked slowly as she considered Dennis Deane. Her black hair reached almost to her waist. She shifted her books to her left arm.

Jim noticed that her right hand was balled into a dangerous-looking fist. "Hey, whoa," he said, stepping in front of her. "Don't hit him."

Dennis Deane flinched. "Hit me?" he said, without opening his eyes. "Is somebody about to hit me?"

Chrissie's shoulders rose and fell with her breathing. "I'm about to beat you all over this schoolyard, you little worm," she said. "I will not be talked to that way."

Dennis Deane covered his head with his arms and whimpered, "Don't hurt me, you big, strong, she-girl."

"He didn't mean anything by it," said Jim. "He's just a little, well, insane, is what he is."

"I've got an extra eyeball," Dennis Deane said. "Do you want me to show it to you?"

Chrissie turned away from Dennis Deane and stared levelly at Jim with what he took to be an expression of slight disappointment. "Are you his friend?" she asked.

"Sort of, I guess," he said. "More like his guardian. Something like that."

Jim caught a slight whiff of vanilla and wished she would step even closer. He felt himself beginning to smile and thought, wildly, We're almost close enough to kiss.

Chrissie did not smile back, but she opened her fist. "Well. You tell your little friend that I will not stand for anyone talking to me like that. Ever. You tell him that if he talks to me that way again, I will beat him like a borrowed mule."

"Hee-haw," Dennis Deane said from behind Jim.

"Dennis Deane," Jim warned over his shoulder. "Shut up."

"I mean it, Jim Glass," Chrissie said.

"I know you do," said Jim.

"You tell him."

"I will."

Chrissie nodded once, turned on her heel, and pulled open the door. Then she was gone. Nobody laughed, although Jim wanted to. He felt wonderfully, inexplicably happy.

Dennis Deane stepped out from behind Jim and made a show of adjusting his shirt collar. He blew into his palm, checking his breath.

"Well," he said. "She loves me. Write it down in the big book, boys. Write it down."

"She was going to knock you out," Larry said.

"I should have let her hit you," Jim said.

"Don't mess around with that girl," said Otis. "I'm serious. If she doesn't beat your ass, then Bucky will when he gets home on leave."

"Bucky Bucklaw," Dennis Deane scoffed. "How am I supposed to be afraid of somebody with a name that stupid?"

Larry pointed down the hill at the long passenger train drawing a thick silver line through town. "Hey, look at that," he said.

The windows of the coaches were open, and men in uniforms, their shirtsleeves rolled up, were hanging out most of them. Soldiers. A whole trainload of them. Jim wondered what they saw when they looked at Aliceville, if anything would make an impression worth remembering; he wondered where they were going.

"Troop train," he said.

"What?" Dennis Deane said. "Has the train got soldiers on it?"

The bell rang. The boys picked up their books.

"You're blind as a mole," Jim said.

"I don't need to see," said Dennis Deane. "I've got an extra eyeball."

(Continues...)




Excerpted from The Blue Star by Tony Earley Copyright © 2008 by Tony Earley. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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