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The Boys Who Woke Up Early
- Narrated by: Christopher Carley
- Length: 7 hrs and 8 mins
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Too much creative drama
- By Anonymous User on 16-04-2024
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Publisher's Summary
Playing cops was just a game until the bullets were real.
The gravy train hasn’t stopped in the hollers of western Virginia for more than 30 years when Stony Shelor starts his junior year at Jubal Early High. Class divides and racism are still the hardened norms as the Eisenhower years draw to a close. Violence lies coiled under the calm surface, ready to strike at any time.
On the high school front, the cool boys are taking their wardrobe and music cues from hip TV private dick Peter Gunn, and Dobie Gillis is teaching them how to hit on pretty girls. There’s no help for Stony on the horizon, though. Mary Lou Martin is the girl of his dreams, and she hardly knows Stony exists. In addition, Stony can’t seem to stay out of juvenile court and just may end up in reform school. A long, difficult year stretches out in front of him when a new boy arrives in town. Likeable bullshit artist Jack Newcomb dresses like Peter Gunn, uses moves like Dobie Gillis, and plays pretty good jazz clarinet.
Jack draws Stony into his fantasy of being a private detective, and the two boys start hanging around the county sheriff’s office. Accepted as sources of amusement and free labor, the aspiring gumshoes land their first case after the district attorney’s house is burglarized. Later, the boys hatch an ingenious scheme to help the deputies raid an illegal speakeasy and brothel. All the intrigue feels like fun and games to Jack and Stony until a gunfight with a hillbilly boy almost gets them killed. The stakes rise even higher when the boys find themselves facing off against the Ku Klux Klan.
Critic Reviews
"Narrator Christopher Carley inhabits this sublime coming-of-age story set in Virginia in the late 1950s-'60s. Descriptions are so well written and rendered that listeners will feel they're actually witnessing events" (S.G.B., AudioFile magazine)
"A deftly crafted and unfailingly engaging read of a novel from first page to last, The Boys Who Woke Up Early showcases author A. D. Hopkins’s impressive and distinctive narrative storytelling style." (Midwest Book Review)
“Equipped with the grace of a fencer and the attentiveness of a journalist, A.D. Hopkins drops us into the world of teenager Stony Shelor, a blossoming humanist, would-be-detective, and hopeful gallant. Read it for the perfectly pitched turn-of-phrase, for the reminder that in every community, there are those fighting for the right and the true.” (Laura McBride, author of We Are Called to Rise and In the Midnight Room)