The News-Gazette, Champaign-Urbana, Illinois. 11/15/09
Coming of Age in North Carolina
Although much young adult literature today is dark, edgy, and/or ironic, Tony Early’s “Jim the Boy” (Little, Brown & Company, 2000) and “The Blue Star” (Little, Brown & Company, 2008) are none of the above. Technically speaking, they’re not young adult novels, either: Earley has described “Jim the Boy” as “a children’s book for adults.” Still, many teen readers will love these books, especially those who have enjoyed Richard Peck’s gentle, witty books featuring the inimitable Grandma Dowdel (“A Year Down Yonder,” “A Long Way From Chicago”).
Jim Glass, the hero of both books, was born in the mythical town of Aliceville North Carolina in 1924, just a week after his father dropped dead of a heart attack. And while his father’s absence is part of the fabric of Jim’s life, his story is not one of loss but of abundance, even in the midst of the Depression. He is lovingly raised by his mother and his three bachelor uncles: Zeno, Al and Coran.
The story begins with Jim’s tenth birthday: “During the night something like a miracle happened: Jim’s age grew an extra digit.” Over the course of the novel, Jim befriends a “mountain boy” at their new school; has a near-encounter with the baseball player Ty Cobb; and in one magical scene, witnesses the introduction of electricity on Christmas Eve. By the end, Jim gains a new appreciation of the grandfather who had rejected him, the uncles who embraced him, and his own identity.
In Early’s follow-up work, “The Blue Star,” Jim is a 17-year old senior in high school, and the country is on the brink of World War II. He is the same thoughtful, caring boy he was at 10, but life is inevitably more complicated. He is in love with a half-Cherokee girl, Chrissie, engaged to marry a boy who joined the Navy just before Pearl Harbor. Their relationship is complicated by the fact that Chrissie’s family is virtually indentured to her fiancé’s wealthy family.
“You get bad feelings about a lot of things,” Jim says to Chrissie one day. “There’s a lot in the world to feel bad about,” she replies. “I guess I never thought of it that way,” Jim says, “I think there’s a lot in the world to feel good about.” And there are a lot of things to feel good about in these evocative coming-of-age novels. Recommended for teens and adults alike.
Sara Latta, Champaign, is the author of eleven books for children. Although she specializes in writing about science and medicine, she enjoys reading a wide range of fiction and nonfiction. She has an M.F.A. in creative writing and is currently working on a novel for young adult readers as well as a series of books about forensic science.