The silver star A novel

Jeannette Walls

Large print - 2013

Two motherless sisters--Bean and Liz--are shuttled to Virginia, where their Uncle Tinsley lives in the decaying mansion that's been in their family for generations. When school starts in the fall, Bean easily adjusts and makes friends, and Liz becomes increasingly withdrawn. Then something happens to Liz and Bean is left to challenge the injustice of the adult world.

Saved in:
Subjects
Published
Waterville, Maine : Thorndike Press 2013.
Language
English
Main Author
Jeannette Walls (-)
Edition
Large print edition
Physical Description
395 pages
ISBN
9781410458452
Contents unavailable.
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]

CHAPTER FIVE The birds woke me early the next morning. I had never heard such noisy birds. I went to the window, and they were everywhere--in the trees right outside, on the ground, swooping in and out of the barn like they owned the place, all the different chirps and tweets and warbling making this incredible commotion. Liz and I got dressed and walked down to the house. When we knocked on the front door, there was no answer, so we went around to the back. Through a window, we could see Uncle Tinsley moving around inside the kitchen. Liz rapped on the windowpane, and Uncle Tinsley opened the door but blocked it like he had the night before. He had shaved, his wet hair was combed, the part was straight, and instead of his bathrobe, he was wearing gray trousers and a light blue shirt with TMH monogrammed on the pocket. "How did you girls sleep?" he asked. "Just fine," Liz said. "The birds sure are noisy," I said. "I don't use pesticides, so the birds love it around here," Uncle Tinsley said. "Did Mom call, by any chance?" Liz asked. "Afraid not." "She does have the number, right?" I asked. "This number hasn't changed since we got it--two, four, six, eight," he said. "First phone number handed out in Byler, so we got to choose it. Speaking of choosing, how do you like your poached eggs?" "Hard!" I said. "Soft," Liz said. "Have a seat over there." He pointed to some rusty cast-iron lawn furniture. A few minutes later, he came out carrying that same silver tray, loaded up with a stack of toast and three plates that each had a poached egg in the center. The plates had gold curlicues around the rim, but the edges were chipped. I picked up a corner of my egg and scooted a piece of toast under it, then stabbed the yolk with my fork, chopped up the white part of the egg, and mushed it all together. "Bean always mutilates her food," Liz told Uncle Tinsley. "It's disgusting." "It tastes better mixed up," I said. "But that's not the only reason. First of all, you don't have to take as many bites, so it saves time. Second, you don't have to work as hard chewing, because if it's all mushed up, it's sort of prechewed. Finally, food gets all mixed up in your stomach anyway, so that's obviously the way it was meant to be." Uncle Tinsley gave a little chuckle and turned to Liz. "Is she always like this?" "Oh, yeah," Liz said. "She's the Beanhead." We offered to wash the dishes, but Uncle Tinsley insisted it was easier if he did them himself, without a couple of kids underfoot. He told us to go off and do whatever girls our age did. Liz and I walked around to the front of the house, where there were two big trees with shiny dark leaves and big white flowers.  Beyond them, on the far side of the lawn, was a row of huge green bushes with a gap in the middle. We walked through the gap and found ourselves in an area surrounded by the dark green bushes. A few tough irises pushed up through the weeds in old, overgrown flower beds. In the center was a round brick-edged pond. It was full of dead leaves, but in the water beneath, I saw a flash of brilliant orange. "Fish!" I yelled. "Goldfish! There's goldfish in this pond!" We knelt and studied the orange fish fluttering in and out of the shadows beneath the clumps of dead leaves. I decided this would be a great place for Fido to have a swim. The poor turtle had to be feeling cooped up after all that time in his box. I ran back to the barn, but when I opened the Tupperware, Fido was floating in the water. He'd seemed fine when I fed him earlier. I set him down on the tabletop, scooting him along with my finger, trying to jump-start him, even though I knew it was hopeless. Fido was dead, and it was all my fault. I had thought I could protect Fido and take care of him, but that bus trip had been too much for the poor little guy. He'd have been better off if I'd left him in Lost Lake. I put Fido back in the Tupperware dish and carried him out to the pond. Liz put an arm around me and said we needed to ask Uncle Tinsley where to bury him. Uncle Tinsley was still puttering in the kitchen when we knocked. "I thought the two of you were going to go off and play," he said. "Fido died," I said. Uncle Tinsley glanced at Liz. "Bean's turtle," she said. "We need to know where to bury him," I said. Uncle Tinsley stepped out of the house and closed the door behind him. I handed him the Tupperware dish, and he looked down at Fido. "We bury all the family pets in the family cemetery," he said. He led us back to the barn, where he picked up a shovel with a long wooden handle, then we all headed up the hill behind it. "Fido's a peculiar name for a turtle," he said as we walked along. "Bean really wanted a dog," Liz said, explaining how Mom had told us it was always the kids who wanted the pet but the mother who ended up taking care of it, and she had no interest in walking and cleaning up after a dog. So she'd bought me a turtle. "Fido means 'I am faithful,' " I said. "Fido was a very faithful turtle." "I bet he was," Uncle Tinsley said. Beyond the barn were a bunch of dilapidated wooden buildings. Uncle Tinsley pointed out the smokehouse, the milking shed and the foaling shed, the henhouse, the icehouse, and the springhouse, explaining that Mayfield used to be a real working farm, though hands did most of the work. He still had all 205 acres, including a stretch of woods, as well as the big hay field where the cemetery was. These days, a farmer up the road, Mr. Muncie, hayed the field and gave Uncle Tinsley eggs and vegetables in return. We passed through an orchard, Uncle Tinsley showing us the apple, peach, and cherry trees, and out into a large pasture. At the top of the pasture, a cluster of trees shaded the family cemetery, which was surrounded by a rusting wrought-iron fence. The cemetery was weedy, and a number of the weathered old headstones had toppled over. Uncle Tinsley led us to one well-tended grave with a newish headstone. This was Martha's, he said, with a vacant spot next to it for him when the time came. The pets, he explained, were buried around the perimeter, near their owners. "Let's put Fido near Martha," Uncle Tinsley said. "I think she would have liked him." Uncle Tinsley dug a small hole, and I placed Fido in it, using the Tupperware dish as his coffin. I found a nice piece of white quartz for a headstone. Uncle Tinsley gave a short eulogy. Fido had been a brave and indeed a faithful turtle, he said, who had made the long and perilous journey from California in order to serve as a guardian for his two sister-owners. Once he'd gotten them safely to Virginia, Fido's job was over, and he felt free to leave them for that secret island in the middle of the ocean that is turtle heaven.   The eulogy made me feel a lot better about both Fido and Uncle Tinsley. On the way back down the hill, I asked about the goldfish we'd found in the pond. "The fish are koi," Uncle Tinsley said. "That was Mother's garden. One of the finest private gardens in all of Virginia, back in the day. Mother won prizes for it. She was the envy of every lady in the garden club." We swung around the barn and the big white house came into view. I started telling Uncle Tinsley about my house dream and how, when we first arrived at Mayfield, I realized it was the actual house in the dream. Uncle Tinsley became thoughtful. He rested the shovel against an old water trough in front of the barn. "I guess you'd better see the inside of the house, then," he said. "Just to make sure." We followed Uncle Tinsley up the big porch steps. He took a deep breath and opened the door. The front hall was large and dark, with a lot of wooden cabinets that had glass doors. Everything was a mess. Newspapers, magazines, books, and mail were stacked high on the tables and the floor, alongside boxes of rocks and bottles filled with dirt and sand and liquids. "It may look a tad cluttered," he said, "but that's because I'm in the middle of reorganizing everything." "It's not so bad," Liz said. "It just needs a little tidying up." "We can help," I said. "Oh, no. Everything's under control. Everything has its place, and I know where everything is." Uncle Tinsley showed us the parlor, the dining room, and the ballroom. Oil paintings hung crooked on the walls and a few were falling out of their frames. The Persian carpets were worn and frayed, the silk curtains were faded and torn, and the stained wallpaper was peeling away from the walls. A grand piano covered with a dark green velvet cloth stood in the big ballroom with the French doors. There was all this stuff piled on every available surface-- more stacks of paper and notebooks, antique binoculars, pendulum clocks, rolled-up maps, stacks of chipped china, old pistols, ships in bottles, statues of rearing horses, framed photographs, and all these little wooden boxes, one filled with coins, another with buttons, another with old medals. Everything was coated with a thick layer of dust. "There sure is a ton of stuff in here," I said. "Yes, but every single thing you see has value," Uncle Tinsley said. "If you have the brains to appreciate it." He led us up a curving staircase and down a long hall. At the end of the hall, he stopped in front of a pair of doors that faced each other. Both had brass door knockers shaped like birds. "This is the bird wing," Uncle Tinsley told us. "This is where you'll stay. Until your mother comes to pick you up." "We're not sleeping in the barn anymore?" I asked. "Not without Fido there to protect you." Uncle Tinsley opened the doors. We each had our own room, he told us. Both were wallpapered with bird motifs--common birds, like robins and cardinals, and exotic birds, like cockatiels and flamingos. The bird wing, he explained, had been designed for his twin aunts, who were little girls when the house was built. They had loved birds and kept a big Victorian birdhouse full of different kinds of finches. "Where was Mom's room?" I asked."She never mentioned it?" he asked. "The whole bird wing was hers." He pointed through the door of one room. "When she brought you back from the hospital after you were born, she put you in that cradle in the corner there."I looked over at the cradle. It was small and white and made of wicker, and I couldn't understand quite why, but it made me feel very safe. Excerpted from The Silver Star by Jeannette Walls All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.