1,001 Novels: A Library of America
Jim the Boy (2000)
by Tony Earley
Rutherfordton, North Carolina
North Carolina: 8/20
Jim the Boy was an easy mark- under 200 pages, written from the perspective of a prepubescent boy growing up in the 1930's. Earley was named one of Granta's Top 30 Writers Under 30 at one point but the only novels he ever published was this book and a sequel published in 2008. As with all of the authors I hadn't heard of before the 1001 Novels project, I checked out his New York Times coverage and found a really detailed review for this book and a somewhat less detailed review for the sequel and then a review for his most recent collection of short stories, published in 2014. I guess it's not exactly a disappearing act but you'd hardly call him a household name.
The most distinct aspect of Jim the Boy is the author's rejection of complexity that is inherent in choosing a 9/10 year old boy as the narrator and protagonist. Like many of the protagonists and a few of the narrators, Jim isn't a complicated fellow. This isn't a trauma narrative, but the opposite, a non-trauma narrative where the emotional peak is a back-alley confrontation in a small North Carolina town where Jim and a buddy are threatened by local streets toughs, and rescued by a friendly African-American. In fact, I'm hard pressed to think of another book within the 1,001 Novels: A Library of America project that is so gosh darned wholesome.
The New York Times critic made a big deal out of the style back in 2000, which makes this book sound like a purposeful rebuttal to the frenzied Y2k era, but a quarter century later we have gotten no less frenzied.
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