Billy Coffey’s There
Will Be Stars is a book that comes at you like one of those 1500-piece
jigsaw puzzles that, piece by added-piece, finally start to make a little sense
to you. But unlike those puzzles where
you snap the last piece in and everything is perfect, I still found myself pondering
There Will Be Stars several days
after I turned its last page. As I think
about the book, little hints and clues that got by me the first time around
surface from my subconscious, and my appreciation for the novel grows.
Here’s something to think about. What if you die, only to arrive in a slightly
skewed version of the world you just left behind? More importantly, what if it is impossible to
figure out if you’ve gone to heaven or to hell?
Bobby Barnes is perhaps the most notorious drunk in
Mattingly, Virginia. If anyone there deserves
to go to hell upon his demise, it’s probably Bobby. He’s a two-case-a-day beer drinker whose
driving is a menace to everyone in the area, the kind of guy that the local
sheriff expects to be scraping off the highway any day now. Bobby, though, is not really a bad guy, he’s simply someone who uses
alcohol to make him forget the things he blames himself for. But when the inevitable crash finally
happens, Bobby wakes up on the morning of the day that he died – and learns
that he must relive that day over and over again. The good news is that the same 24 ice-cold
beers he drank the day before are waiting for him in the shop
refrigerator. The bad news is that if
there were a day Bobby could choose to live all over again, this most certainly
would not be the one he would pick.
Billy Coffey |
As Bobby will learn, though, he’s not the only one trapped
this way. There are several others, in fact, and they have formed a little family of
their own at the home of a woman they now think of as “Mama.” Among them, are an old schoolteacher of
Bobby’s, a little boy, a housewife, a town preacher, and a bully of a man who
thinks about little but baseball and fishing.
All of them have been re-living these same 24-hours much longer than
Bobby has, but they are no closer to figuring out where they are than he is.
So are they in heaven, or are they in some grotesque version
of hell? That depends on whom you ask,
and when Bobby decides this can’t be the peaceful heaven that Mama tells them
it is, things turn nasty for Bobby and anyone who thinks the way he does. Bobby wants out – but he has a few things to
do first.
There Will Be Stars gives
the reader a lot to think about…and that’s a good thing.
(Review Copy provided by Publisher for review)
No comments:
Post a Comment
I always love hearing from you guys...that's what keeps me book-blogging. Thanks for stopping by.