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The Night Train

A Novel

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
0 of 1 copy available
In 1963, at the age of 17, Dwayne Hallston discovers James Brown and wants to perform just like him. His band, the Amazing Rumblers, studies and rehearses Brown's Live at the Apollo album in the storage room of his father's shop in their small North Carolina town. Meanwhile, Dwayne's forbidden black friend Larry — aspiring to play piano like Thelonius Monk — apprentices to a jazz musician called the Bleeder. His mother hopes music will allow him to escape the South.
A dancing chicken and a mutual passion for music help Dwayne and Larry as they try to achieve their dreams and maintain their friendship, even while their world says both are impossible. In The Night Train, Edgerton's trademark humor reminds us of our divided national history and the way music has helped bring us together.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from March 28, 2011
      Great historical tides rise slowly, particularly in the rural 1963 North Carolina of Edgerton's slick tale (after The Bible Salesman) of music and racial revolution. The surreptitiously exhibited but strong teenage friendship between Larry Lime Beacon of Time Reckoning Breathe on Me Nolan (yes, that's his entire name), an aspiring jazz pianist hoping to ride his musical talent out of rural segregation, and Dwayne Hallston, a middle-class white boy enamored of James Brown, frames the tumult and upheaval of the civil rights movement in East and West Starke, N.C. The two music-mad boys live in divided communities, poignantly characterized by the burdens of their respective pasts, which "brought hardships to the people of West Starke not understood by the people of East Starke, and guilt to the East not understood by anybodyâa guilt that if moving deep in a lake, would leave the surface flat calm." Edgerton sustains a wry tone in this lightly plotted novel, where the action is confined to band practices, a chicken flung over a cinema balcony, and well-intentioned but comically inept attempts at integration. The characters are drawn with compassion and droll humor, and while not much happens to them, what happens between them is the work of a generous, restrained writer whose skill and craft allows small scenes to tell a larger, more profound story.

    • Kirkus

      May 1, 2011

      James Brown connects two boys, white and black, in a light novel about North Carolina in the tense 1960s.

      Veteran novelist Edgerton (The Bible Salesman, 2008, etc.) is profoundly skilled at taking on some of Southern literature's most difficult themes—race and religion especially—and addressing them with both respect and humor. The hero of his latest, set in 1963, is Larry Lime, a black teenager whose musical talent is nurtured by the Bleeder, the star pianist at a club on the outskirts of a small North Carolina town. Larry takes what he's learned to his job at a furniture shop, where he advises Dwayne, who's trying to get his band to play a note-for-note version of James Brown's iconic Live at the Apollo album. Southern mores demand that Larry support Dwayne (who's white) without attracting attention, and Edgerton deftly shifts from intimate looks at their growing friendship to wide-angle shots of the racial divides among businesses and residents in the area. And he smartly merges social commentary with comedy: As Larry and Dwayne concoct a ridiculous plot to toss a chicken from a movie-theater balcony during a tense scene in The Birds, Edgerton gently highlights how the theater's segregation policy inspired the idea in the first place. Various subplots involving Larry's extended family underscore the point that the color line was more porous than anybody wanted to admit at the time, though in the closing chapters Edgerton strains to sound an uplifting note without coming off as mawkish. Still, the command of Southern idioms and culture that earned him his reputation remains solid, and his affinity for simple sentences and clean chapter breaks give this slim novel an almost fable-like power.

      Edgerton's knowledge about music is on full display, as is his understanding of the subtleties of race relations as the Civil Rights Movement picked up steam.

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • Library Journal

      February 15, 2011

      In 1963 North Carolina, white teenager Dwayne wants to play like James Brown, and his secret friend, black teenager Larry, wants to play like Thelonius Monk. Maybe music can help them break barriers and achieve their dreams. From beloved Southern novelist Edgerton (e.g., The Bible Salesman), who's even a songwriter with a band; there's a five-city tour and a reading group guide.

      Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from April 15, 2011
      The delightfulness of the opening scene sets the stage for this novels key elements. A black jazz-guitarist called the Bleeder sits in the daytime emptiness of a bar in small-town North Carolinathe only regular jazz spot within a hundred milesand conducts an impromptu guitar lesson for a teenage black boy who has just wandered in. Its 1963, and the nascent civil rights movement is moving in locally. But at the same time, black-white differences continue to abound. Music is the best vehicle for cutting across those boundaries. As locally famous performer Bobby Lee Reese says, I can tell you about my audience on both sides of the track. Edgerton frames his sensitive new novel around the unlikely and disapproved-of friendship between Larry, the boy the Bleeder is teaching to play, and Dwayne, a white boy who fronts a group called the Amazing Rumblers and is determined to break out of town on a talent ticket. It is the wealth of well-understood characters that carries the reader through this engaging novels easily consumed pages. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Print advertising in the New York Times Book Review and a national media campaign will augment Edgertons own name recognition in bringing his new novel to widespread attention.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      May 15, 2011

      This upbeat novel celebrates the arrival of soul music to a sleepy North Carolina town in 1963. It comes by way of a James Brown album, Live at the Apollo, released that year. Blacks and whites are segregated, of course, and the novel focuses on an important moment in American history when soul music and rock 'n' roll begin to break down racial barriers among the young. At the center of the novel are two young men--one black and one white--who both work at a local furniture refinishing shop. Both are budding musicians, and music brings them together in ways that cause them to confront the racial mores of their hometown. Edgerton (Walking Across Egypt) tells this story skillfully and entertainingly, bringing the characters in this novel richly and vibrantly to life. He has an ear for the vernacular, and the dialog here is particularly noteworthy, bristling and alive with gritty Southern flavor. VERDICT Recommended for all fans of literary fiction. [See Prepub Alert, 1/17/11.]--Patrick Sullivan, Manchester Community Coll., CT

      Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      May 1, 2011

      James Brown connects two boys, white and black, in a light novel about North Carolina in the tense 1960s.

      Veteran novelist Edgerton (The Bible Salesman, 2008, etc.) is profoundly skilled at taking on some of Southern literature's most difficult themes--race and religion especially--and addressing them with both respect and humor. The hero of his latest, set in 1963, is Larry Lime, a black teenager whose musical talent is nurtured by the Bleeder, the star pianist at a club on the outskirts of a small North Carolina town. Larry takes what he's learned to his job at a furniture shop, where he advises Dwayne, who's trying to get his band to play a note-for-note version of James Brown's iconic Live at the Apollo album. Southern mores demand that Larry support Dwayne (who's white) without attracting attention, and Edgerton deftly shifts from intimate looks at their growing friendship to wide-angle shots of the racial divides among businesses and residents in the area. And he smartly merges social commentary with comedy: As Larry and Dwayne concoct a ridiculous plot to toss a chicken from a movie-theater balcony during a tense scene in The Birds, Edgerton gently highlights how the theater's segregation policy inspired the idea in the first place. Various subplots involving Larry's extended family underscore the point that the color line was more porous than anybody wanted to admit at the time, though in the closing chapters Edgerton strains to sound an uplifting note without coming off as mawkish. Still, the command of Southern idioms and culture that earned him his reputation remains solid, and his affinity for simple sentences and clean chapter breaks give this slim novel an almost fable-like power.

      Edgerton's knowledge about music is on full display, as is his understanding of the subtleties of race relations as the Civil Rights Movement picked up steam.

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • Library Journal

      November 15, 2011
      This short novel takes place during the turbulent early 1960s in rural North Carolina. Two teenage boys—one black, one white—develop a tentative relationship based on their devotion to jazz and blues. The author sets the stage with care, and the subsequent events are somehow both surprising and inevitable. Edgerton brings a community into focus for this brief snapshot of a turning point for two young men and a way of life. T. Ryder Smith narrates conversationally with a resonant tenor voice. His pleasant, slow Southern pacing fits the story. However, he is less successful with the dialog when his voice rises in pitch, giving most of the characters an undeserved whine. Recommended with reservations for literary audio collections. ["Recommended for all fans of literary fiction," read the review of the Little, Brown hc, "LJ" 5/15/11.—Ed.]—Juleigh Muirhead Clark, Colonial Williamsburg Fdn. Lib., VA

      Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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