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La Stella Blu (2010)

by Tony Earley(Favorite Author)
3.87 of 5 Votes: 5
ISBN
8834715683 (ISBN13: 9788834715680)
languge
English
publisher
Fanucci
series
Jim Glass
review 1: So you don't always have to read the first book first. I heard Tony Earley speak at the Conference on Southern Literature back in April of this year in Chattanooga. He was humble and funny and I loved hearing him talk about his upbringing and how it influenced his writing. I loved that last part most because I'm a vain at heart and he said it was his second grade teacher who identified him as a writer and made him think of himself as such for the rest of his life. I love to pretend that all teachers (including moi) have that kind of positive influence. Don't burst my bubble. At any rate, this book is actually a follow up to his earlier work, Jim the Boy, a book I did not pick up because it reminded me of a Jesse Stuart title and because I was forced to read Stuart as a kid... more I just decided in a most immature fashion that I'd hate a book that echoed Stuart. And now that I think back on it, the Stuart book I'm remembering was called The Beatinest Boy and Stuart is a great author I need to revisit.At any rate, you do NOT have to read Earley's first book to truly enjoy this one, about which Yvonne Zipp of The Christian Science Monitor said, "Tony Earley's novels are the Shaker chairs of American literature". I do love that blurb (and he has some great ones!) but it leaves a little something to be desired: you get the simplicity reference from her thought, but it misses out on the humor of the book (unless you think Shaker furniture is an understatement in hilarity). Earley paints a vivid portrait of a young man in high school who learns the hard way about love between the classes in his small North Carolina mountain community. The second world war looms large and in fact the book covers Pearl Harbor (an event that, once announced, prompts one of the book's characters to ask "What's Pearl Harbor?", a question I'm sure many young men of the day posed). Jim falls in love with an unobtainable girl: she's "engaged" to a young man who's off in the Navy. What ensues are very raw moments of reflection from a young man who loves his car, wants to love this girl, and hasn't the faintest idea how to really grow up (just like the rest of us).
review 2: ARC from RegalFunny thing about me and reading, When books are part of a series, I have to read them one right after the other. I don't like to squeeze other books in between them, unless of course they are already 12 novels long and I've only just discovered them (then it becomes a bit like chocolate - tastes good for the first 3 or 4 pcs, then just gets to be sickening and depressing)... OR they are still being released, in which case, I have no choice but fill the time from one release date to the other with books from my to-be-read pile (Of which there are currently over 200!!)This book came as a package deal along with "Jim the Boy" (see my review here) and "Beat the Reaper" (next up) from Regal Literary, and thank goodness, because it saved me the potentially life threatening trip out into the Snow Storm Of The Century this weekend to purchase it. I have been flying through my to-be-read pile this week, and a very large part of that is due to the fact that the books I have received for review have been quite good, and seem to demand most of my free time. For instance: I woke this morning, let the puppy out for his morning walk, and plopped my butt on the couch to start reading "The Blue Star" and squeeze in a few pages before the boys crawled out of bed looking for breakfast. Still set in North Carolina, I find Jim - all grown up in his senior year of high school - still acting like a silly boy and hanging on the front steps of the school with his buddies. After breakfast, I slide back onto the couch to find that Jim is in love with a beautiful girl who lives up on the mountian. He slides his desk up against the back of her chair and secretly plays with her hair as it covers the pages of his textbook in history class. Poor Jim, though... it appears that the one he pines for belongs to another, who is currently on a boat in an ocean fighting in WWII. Ooohh rats, the boys want lunch now.Once the boys' tummys are full again, it's back to the couch and the book to find out that Jim's Uncle Zeno had almost married the mother of the girl he is in love with. Not to mention that Jim himself appears to be in some sort of tangle with Norma, a girl he once dated, that he broke it off with, who still carries a torch for him. Damn, laundry is piling up. Let me get a load going.Back to the couch (which now seems to have this funny butt-shaped indent in it) and Jim, who confesses his love to the girl he can't have, who warns him off but not before geting flirty and hiding in the fog on the mountian and allowing Jim to ask her some personal questions. After this, she ignores him for awhile and nearly breaks his heart by showing up at the school dance with another boy (NOT the boy she is supposedly dating who is still serving in the war)! Shoot, I suppose I should go take a shower, huh?Finally out of my pajamas and on the home stretch, there is a body in a coffin that causes Jim alot of guilt, a fourteen year old girl that got knocked up by Jim's friend at the dance, a heartfelt conversation between Jim and the mother of his crush, and a signature on an enrollment form for the war. It seems like it was only yesterday that I was reading about the little boy Jim and all the mischief and mayhem and mean thoughts...Oh wait, haha! That was only yesterday!All kidding, and soap-opera drama, aside, Earley does a wonderful job helping Jim the Boy grow into Jim the Man. The progression is a painfully natural; the situations he faces and the choices he makes all help to take Jim along the path to manhood. At one point, towards the end of the novel, Jim jokes to himself that he must be the worlds worst adult, giving you a pretty raw peek into the mind of this man who can't see how far he has come, and how much he has grown. Always wanting to do the right things, but not always capable of it. It's part of being human, part of growing up and learning to deal. It's just normal.It was great to revisit little Jim, and I look forward to meeting him again, perhaps as an older, and wiser man in future novels, should Tony Earley so choose. less
Reviews (see all)
1lodgecj
I think I liked this a little more than Jim the Boy but both are excellent reads.
miamusic
It was a delightful read. Love the continuing story of Jim.
Lily
One of my favorite books, to be read again and again.
Onread12
In my opinion, a perfect book. Honestly.
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