The Stars Are Not Yet Bells
A Novel
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- $10.99
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- $10.99
Publisher Description
NAMED A BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR BY THE NEW YORKER AND NPR
Through the scrim of fading memory, an elderly woman confronts a lifetime of secrets and betrayal, under the mysterious skies of her island home
Off the coast of Georgia, near Savannah, generations have been tempted by strange blue lights in the sky near an island called Lyra. At the height of WWII, impressionable young Elle Ranier leaves New York City to forge a new life together on the island with her new husband, Simon. There they will live for decades, raising a family while waging a quixotic campaign to find the source of the mysterious blue offshore light—and the elusive minerals rumored to lurk beneath the surface.
Fifty years later, Elle looks back at her life on the mysterious island—and at a secret she herself has guarded for decades. As her memory recedes into the mists of Alzheimer’s disease, her life seems a tangle of questions: How did her husband’s business, now shuttered, survive so long without ever finding the legendary Lyra stones? How did her own life crumble under treatment for depression? And what became of Gabriel—the handsome, raffish other man who came to the island with them and risked everything to follow the lights?
Darkly romantic and deeply haunting, The Stars Are Not Yet Bells pulls us into a story of the tantalizing, faithless relationship between ourselves and the lives and souls we leave behind.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Assadi (Sonora) returns with a lyrical and melancholic tale of grief, love, and a marriage's open secrets, narrated by a woman who has Alzheimer's. In 1941, Elle Ranier and her jeweler husband, Simon, moved from New York City as young newlyweds to a remote island off the coast of Georgia in search of a variety of jewel akin to diamonds and known locally as the "blue legend." Many people have drowned while seeking the minerals, which are believed to lie at the bottom of the ocean, and Simon's fruitless search eventually leaves his business in shambles. Now, in 1997, Elle remembers her previous lover, Gabriel, in Brooklyn, whom she arranged to work with Simon on the island after claiming he was her cousin, and who died shortly after they arrived. Then, in 1961, Simon grows close with a geologist hired to prospect for the jewels. Elle's reminiscences become hazy as a result of her Alzheimer's, though "for a while, life remained in bright dreams," which evokes a sense of magic with images of mermaids and fairies. As the story of the trio's arrival to the island and their subsequent misfortunes gradually unfolds, Elle circles around the secrets about her and Simon's relationships with other men. The beauty of Assadi's prose and the splendid depiction of a love that transcends death make for a singular rendition of an oft-told story. This will leave readers undone.