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Way to Bright Star

by Dee Brown
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Overview

Ben Butterfield, ex-circus performer, is living out his days in a small backwater town. He spends much of his time dwelling on the past, pondering his glory days with the circus, and his first grand adventure—an odyssey across Missouri and Illinois to Bright Star, Indiana, during the Civil War. It was a journey that laid the groundwork for the man he would become, and on which he got to know the two people who meant the world to him, and still do.

In 1862, Ben sets out to help Johnny Hawkes, a resourceful Texican, drive two camels to the farm home of a Yankee officer who has taken possession of the desert beasts as contraband of war. But when Johnny is imprisoned by the Yankees and charged with horse theft, it is up to Ben to complete the task without his friend and mentor. On the threshold of manhood, he has only the help of a young girl, nicknamed Princess, who spends most of the time masquerading as a boy to avoid drawing unwanted attention. Johnny and Princess must stand together and persevere against the odds if they are to overcome every obstacle placed before them on the winding way to Bright Star.

A magnificent tour of 1860s heartland America, The Way to Bright Star is a grand coming-of-age novel, in the tradition of Huckleberry Finn, and destined to become an American classic.

Synopsis

Ben Butterfield, ex-circus performer, is living out his days in a small backwater town. He spends much of his time dwelling on the past, pondering his glory days with the circus, and his first grand adventure—an odyssey across Missouri and Illinois to Bright Star, Indiana, during the Civil War. It was a journey that laid the groundwork for the man he would become, and on which he got to know the two people who meant the world to him, and still do.

In 1862, Ben sets out to help Johnny Hawkes, a resourceful Texican, drive two camels to the farm home of a Yankee officer who has taken possession of the desert beasts as contraband of war. But when Johnny is imprisoned by the Yankees and charged with horse theft, it is up to Ben to complete the task without his friend and mentor. On the threshold of manhood, he has only the help of a young girl, nicknamed Princess, who spends most of the time masquerading as a boy to avoid drawing unwanted attention. Johnny and Princess must stand together and persevere against the odds if they are to overcome every obstacle placed before them on the winding way to Bright Star.

A magnificent tour of 1860s heartland America, The Way to Bright Star is a grand coming-of-age novel, in the tradition of Huckleberry Finn, and destined to become an American classic.

Publishers Weekly

Returning to the westerns he tells so well, Brown, best known for Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee (1971), takes us on a peculiar odyssey of youth and innocence during the turmoil of the Civil War. The spirited tale opens in 1902, when narrator Ben Butterfield, a gimp-legged former circus horseback performer who is now the harried proprietor of a hardware store, attempts "to set down the story of my wasted life" before he forgets the adventure that was its high point. Forty years earlier, in the spring of 1862 in northwest Arkansas, young Ben embarks on an unlikely journey. A Yankee officer assigns him, cavalry scout Johnny Hawkes and Egyptian cameleer Hadjee the duty of transporting two camels, the officer's own personal contraband, from Arkansas to his farm in Bright Star, Indiana. Traveling across Arkansas and Missouri in 1862 turns out to be a tricky proposition as Ben and his comrades meet Rebs and Yanks, shysters, thieves and all-around mean-spirited folks. After witnessing a bungled bank robbery, Ben's party offers sanctuary to a luckless robber who turns out to be a young girl. Now fugitive themselves, the party is pursued by the law and by a crazy gunmanwho is after more than just gold. Short on action but studded with colorful vignettes, this sentimental story reflects, both buoyantly and tenderly, the moments of love, friendship and fame its Huckleberry Finn-like protagonist briefly enjoyed.

About the Author, Dee Brown

DEE BROWN is the acclaimed master of several bestsellers, including the classic nonfiction work Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, which sold over five million copies worldwide, and the highly acclaimed novel Creek Mary’s Blood. This revered writer, who has lived through most of this century, has written over two dozen books on life in frontier America, and forever put his stamp on American history. Dee Brown lives in Little Rock, Arkansas.

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Editorials

From the Publisher

“This tale of America’s Gilded Age is told with a vigor and irony that do full justice to its excesses, energies, venalities, and dreams.”—Newsweek on Hear That Lonesome Whistle Blow

“It is obvious from the outset that Brown knows the Civil War period as well as he knows the Indian War and the taming of the West…A consummate storyteller. The rivers flow, the winds blow, the nights are full of secrets, and the days pulse with real life.”—The Washington Post on Conspiracy of Knaves

“With unerring eye and unflinching irony, Mr. Brown shows how history, myth, and business work hand in hand…As loaded with nuggets as the streambed at Sutter’s Mill.”—The New York Times on The American West

“Brown is a master of the plain style, modulating it skillfully to fit whatever engages his sense of wonder.”—The Orlando Sentinel

“There is serendipity involved in Dee Brown’s story, all right, but it is ours, not his. A Boston banker reads Creek Mary’s Blood and changes his mind about fiction. A bored young student picks up The Westerners because of the title and changes his mind about reading. An entire nation reads Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee and changes its mind about history.”—Arkansas Democrat Gazette

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Returning to the westerns he tells so well, Brown, best known for Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee (1971), takes us on a peculiar odyssey of youth and innocence during the turmoil of the Civil War. The spirited tale opens in 1902, when narrator Ben Butterfield, a gimp-legged former circus horseback performer who is now the harried proprietor of a hardware store, attempts "to set down the story of my wasted life" before he forgets the adventure that was its high point. Forty years earlier, in the spring of 1862 in northwest Arkansas, young Ben embarks on an unlikely journey. A Yankee officer assigns him, cavalry scout Johnny Hawkes and Egyptian cameleer Hadjee the duty of transporting two camels, the officer's own personal contraband, from Arkansas to his farm in Bright Star, Indiana. Traveling across Arkansas and Missouri in 1862 turns out to be a tricky proposition as Ben and his comrades meet Rebs and Yanks, shysters, thieves and all-around mean-spirited folks. After witnessing a bungled bank robbery, Ben's party offers sanctuary to a luckless robber who turns out to be a young girl. Now fugitive themselves, the party is pursued by the law and by a crazy gunmanwho is after more than just gold. Short on action but studded with colorful vignettes, this sentimental story reflects, both buoyantly and tenderly, the moments of love, friendship and fame its Huckleberry Finn-like protagonist briefly enjoyed.

Kirkus Reviews

An amiable, rather autumnal novel about the coming-of-age of an orphan during the Civil War, by a prolific western historian (The American West, 1994) and novelist (Conspiracy of Knaves, 1987, etc.). In a lively, appropriately picaresque narrative, Ben Butterfield, in the twilight of the 19th century, looks back at his life on the frontier and muses about the great love of his life. Orphaned under mysterious circumstances, Ben spent a hardscrabble childhood in Texas before falling in with the laconic (and somewhat lethal) scout Johnny Hawkes, a man supremely skilled in all matters having to do with horses. In 1862, Johnny and Ben, an adolescent, are recruited, by an arrogant and somewhat duplicitous Union officer, to drive two camels captured from the Confederate forces north to St. Louis, through the bloody, contested territory of Kansas and Missouri. Along the way they encounter outlaws, Confederates, a variety of hapless Union troops chasing both groups, some happily homicidal townspeople, and a young woman, Queen Elizabeth Jones, passing herself off as a boy. Elizabeth, Ben, Johnny, and the harried handler of the camels, an Egyptian named Hadjee, survive assaults and adventures, and Ben and Elizabeth, despite the obstacles, get the camels through. Meanwhile, Ben, confronted with crises and betrayals, grows up and falls in love with Elizabeth. Brown has a deft hand with dialogue, giving it a believable tang without overdoing the regional color, and his portraits of a war- ravaged countryside, devastated farms, and hard-bitten groups of men hunting each other across a harsh landscape are memorable and convincing. Ben, Elizabeth, and Johnny go on to join a circus, but their lives asentertainers, and the tragic end of Benþs romance, are treated in a somewhat desultory fashion. Still, this is a sweet-natured, vigorous, colorful entertainment, and a compelling portrait of the frontier.

Book Details

Published
September 1, 2008
Publisher
Doherty, Tom Associates, LLC
Pages
352
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780765322555

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