I’ve read all of
Bill Coffey’s novels, from Snow
Day (2010) to The
Curse of Crow Hollow (2015). And I’ve watched his work grow and develop
and take on a shape both unexpected and delightful.
And now comes
novel #7: There
Will Be Stars.
Coffey’s been
bending genres for some time now, moving from general fiction to more
speculative. There Will Be Stars
almost defies categorization. It is speculative. It is suspense. It is mystery.
It is imagination. It is faith. But it’s also something else.
It’s what I
would call literary.
Coffey has been
moving in this direction, but There Will
Be Stars plants a flag.
The story: Bobby
Barnes, the official town drunk in the small Southern mountain town of
Mattingly, wakes up one morning, thinking through the recurring nightmare of
the night before. His twin sons Matthew and Mark accompany him to the local filling
station for gas and beer. After an altercation with the station owner and the
sheriff, he heads to another filling station, where he runs into Junior Hewitt,
a kind of bully who lives in the past glory of a minor league baseball game. Junior
hears Bobby say something about Junior going fishing – an ordinary statement in
and of itself – but Junior realizes Bobby has seen something unexpected – the future.
And junior knows what that means.
Junior grabs
Bobby and takes him to the house of the Widow Cash, who has just started lunch
with a few friends – a young boy named Tommy, a young woman named Laura Beth
who wears sunglasses all the time, the retired high school teacher George, and
the Methodist preacher Juliet Creech. Gradually Bobby comes to understand that
the people sitting around that table are dead, reliving the last day of their
lives in an endless loop. It’s a loop called “The Turn.”
Billy Coffey |
And Bobby
realizes something else: he’s in his own Turn. And that must mean he’s dead.
This is not a
story about zombies. It is a story about sin and redemption. It is a story
about how the spiritual and the real are interwoven in daily life. It’s a story
that’s powerfully written, with a command of the narrative that is amazing.
It is also a
literary work. As readable as it is, it lifts the reader to a higher place. We
move out from what is simply a good story and discover ourselves in a different
place altogether. Great fiction aims for this, and There Will Be Stars succeeds at it.
Related: My reviews of Coffey’s books
Snow
Day (2010)
When
Mockingbirds Sing
(2013)
The
Devil Walks in Mattingly
(2014)
The
Curse of Crow Hollow
(2015)
1 comment:
Great review! I love Billy's novels. Glad to hear this is another excellent story.
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