Review by New York Times Review
LADIES, if you want your kid to grow up to be a writer (and who doesn't?), here are some simple steps you can take to give your progeny a leg up: 1) Be glamorous. 2) Go bonkers. There's a reason crazy mothers appear in fiction more often than semicolons. Write what you know, as they say. Jeannette Walls established her bona fides in the unreliable parent department with her memoir, "The Glass Castle," a case study in how to survive a chaotic childhood and get into Barnard. Her new novel, "The Silver Star," revisits some of that book's themes, so it should feel tired: Financial struggle. An impulsive, artistic mother. A precocious, plucky child narrator. A nostalgic setting. It's annoying how great writing can transcend cliché. "The Silver Star" turns out to be an absorbing, unsentimental tale of childhood, place and emus. Yes, emus. Bean, the book's narrator, is 12 years old and living in Nowheresville, Calif., in 1970 with her 15-year-old sister, Liz, and their guitar-playing, probably bipolar mother, Charlotte. One day, when Charlotte splits in her brown Dodge Dart to "make some time and space" for herself, Bean and Liz end up busing it to their mother's hometown, Byler, Va., where their Uncle Tinsley is still holed up in the Holladay family's dilapidated ancestral home. Byler is a mill town "where the '60s never happened," and "people seemed to move slowly, and a lot of them were hardly moving at all, just sitting in chairs under store awnings." The mill, once owned by the Holladays, has fallen on hard times and Uncle Tinsley, a self-appointed family archivist (i.e., hoarder), clings to what's left of its legacy. Unlike their genealogy-obsessed uncle, Bean and Liz have only known a life lived in the present, moving from one place to the next based on the whims of their peripatetic mother - Venice Beach, Taos, San Jose and Pasadena. There was even a brief stint in Seattle. (Houseboats, it turns out, are "more expensive than you'd think.") It doesn't take long before Bean has "gone native" and Byler starts to feel like home. But her loyalty is tested as her mother comes and goes, and an assault and ensuing court case divide both the town and her family. Liz, who is more sophisticated and more fragile than Bean, is less enamored of Byler and finds solace in caring for the aforementioned emus. Adolescent narrators are tricky to pull off, but Walls gets what it means to be a kid. Bean is smart and observant, but she's also 12, and she has a 12-year-old 's view of the world. She mixes the food on her plate before she eats it because "it tastes better" and "saves time." She sees her mother's flaws, but she loves her absolutely, without judgment. When grown-ups think of 1970 they think of Nixon and Vietnam. But for Bean, this is background noise, and Walls uses more specific details to ground her story in that era: chicken potpies, Tab, a car's push-in lighter, "untangling Mom's wind chimes" before company arrives, a proudly owned Pontiac Le Mans and "the glazed iris-blue mug Mom had made when she was in her ceramic-pottery phase." Here is what Walls knows: kids, especially those who grow up in unstable situations and develop special survival skills, the ability to find quiet moments in the chaos. In other words, when you're raised by maniacs, you learn to pay attention. "There was fruit on the ground under the peach trees, and bees, wasps and butterflies were swarming around, feasting on it. Uncle Tinsley pulled a peach down and passed it to me. It was small and red, covered with fuzz, and warm from the sun. That peach was so juicy that when I bit into it, I felt like it almost burst in my mouth. I wolfed it down, all that juice leaving my chin and fingers sticky. "'Dang,' I said. "'Now, that's a peach,' Uncle Tinsley said." Chelsea Cain's next thriller, "Let Me Go," will be published in August.
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [June 30, 2013]
Review by Booklist Review
Being a single mother is never easy, but for Charlotte Holladay, a wannabe folk singer in 1970, raising her 15- and 12-year-old daughters, Liz and Jean (aka Bean ), is more than she can handle. Known for dropping out when things get tough, Charlotte's latest spell of parental abandonment attracts police attention and the girls flee California rather than face being placed in foster care. A cross-country bus trip lands them on the doorstep of their only relative, the previously unmet Uncle Tinsley, and their arrival proves to be as much of a shock for the reclusive widower as it is for the girls themselves. As the trio learns to coexist, Liz and Bean try to fit into the small southern town. With money tight, they land jobs with mill foreman Jerry Maddox, an overbearing brute who runs roughshod over the town's residents and takes advantage of Liz's trusting nature, with devastating results. Readers familiar with Walls' backstory from her luminous memoir, The Glass Castle (2005), will recognize elements of her personal history in this captivating, read-in-one-sitting, coming-of-age adventure.--Haggas, Carol Copyright 2010 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Readers of Walls's bestselling memoir The Glass Castle may find this new novel too familiar to be entirely satisfying. When 12-year-old Bean Holladay and her 15-year-old sister, Liz, are abandoned by their narcissistic, unstable mother, Charlotte, they make their way to Byler, Va., Charlotte's hometown, in search of an uncle they barely know. In Byler, Bean and Liz find not only their uncle, Tinsley, but also a community eager to see how Charlotte's girls have turned out. The sisters attract particular attention from Jerry Maddox, foreman at the town mill, which the Holladays owned and operated in better times. Walls understands in her bones how growing up with a mentally ill parent can give children extraordinary skills and resilience but also leave them without any sense of the boundary between ordinary behavior and abuse. It's clear from the beginning that Bean and Liz's relationship with Maddox won't end well, and their newfound family may not be able to sustain the damage. When Bean reads To Kill a Mockingbird in school, she seems like a long-lost cousin to Scout, and to the young Walls herself. The other characters are too often thinly conceived, but she makes for a strong and spunky protagonist. Agent: Jennifer Rudolph Walsh, WME Entertainment. (June) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
Best-selling memoirist Walls's (The Glass Castle) first novel is a bildungsroman set in 1970 that delves into issues of racism and bigotry, bullies, neglect, and the love of family. The star of this novel is Jean "Bean" Holladay, the 12-year-old narrator. She is a fully fleshed character who is reminiscent of To Kill a Mockingbird's Scout Finch. Pivotal to this story is the relationship Bean has with her older sister, Liz, who has been the source of stability in Bean's life. When tragedy strikes Liz, the roles reverse as Bean stands by her sister no matter the outcome. Walls performs the narration herself, and while it is smooth, the variations among characters are very subtle, so readers might get sidetracked or confused if not paying close attention. VERDICT For fans of heartwarming fiction such as Harper Lee's classic and Walls's other books. ["This engrossing story is told with the warmth and humor that will appeal to fans of Sue Monk Kidd's The Secret Life of Bees. Readers will find themselves rooting for the spunky heroine and her smart, offbeat sister as they persevere in the face of multiple hardships," read the starred review of the New York Times best-selling Scribner hc, LJ 6/15/13.-Ed.]-Stephanie Charlefour, Wixom P.L., MI (c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Memoirist Walls, who has written about her own nomadic upbringing (The Glass Castle, 2006) and her remarkable grandmother (the novelized biography Half Broke Horses, 2009), turns to out-and-out fiction in this story about two young sisters who leave behind their life on the road for the small Virginia town their mother escaped years before. By 1970, 12-year-old Bean and 15-year-old Liz are used to moving from town to town with their would-be actress/singer mother, Charlotte. When Charlotte takes off to find herself in San Diego, the Holladay sisters know how to fend for themselves, living on potpies and getting themselves to school for several weeks. But then the authorities start sniffing around. Scared they'll be carted off to foster care, Liz decides they should head cross-country to Byler, Va., the hometown Charlotte left for good when Bean was still a baby. Clearly, Walls borrows from her own experience in describing the girls' peripatetic life, but she doesn't waste undue time on the road trip before getting the girls to Byler, where the real drama begins. The Holladays used to own the town's cotton mill, but all that's left is the decaying mansion where Charlotte's widowed brother still lives. Less cutesy eccentric than he first seems, Tinsley gives the girls the security they have missed. Tinsley also reflects Byler itself, a conservative Southern town struggling to adjust to shifting realities of racial integration and the Vietnam War. Bean joins the newly integrated school's pep squad and thrives by assimilating; creative, sensitive Liz chafes under pressure to conform. Then, Charlotte shows up wanting to take the girls to New York City. Walls throws in an unnecessary melodrama concerning an evil bully of a man who threatens Liz with violence and worse, but the novel's strength lies in capturing the complexity of Bean's and Liz's shifting loyalties. Walls turns what could have been another sentimental girl-on-the-run-finds-home clich into a fresh consideration of both adolescence and the South on the cusp of major social change.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.