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book coverStarr Bright Will Be With You Soon

by Joyce Carol Oates writing as Rosamond Smith

New York: Dutton, 1999

264 pages


Dust Jacket Blurb

As Rosamond Smith, Joyce Carol Oates has explored the secret kinship of twins, often depicted as diabolical doubles who are mirror images of our darker, more violent selves—haunting reflections of our deepest fears and dreads. In Starr Bright Will Be with You Soon, she takes this convention to terrifying new heights, as we enter the mind and heart of a female serial killer who seeks refuge with her estranged twin sister.

Starr Bright is the tormented, murderous side of Sharon Donner, a model and exotic dancer turned avenging angel. A drifter who has staked out the Nevada desert as her own personal hell, she lives in a desolate landscape of endless highways and seedy motel rooms. Night after night, she searches for God and love in the fleeting, brutish attentions of men. She travels light: a wallet, some cosmetics, amphetamines, and one pearl-handled stainless steel carving knife with a five-inch blade. Her calling card is a satanic star traced with each of her victims' blood, proof that she is keeping her promise that "Starr Bright will be with you soon."

Now, on the eve of her thirty-seventh birthday, Starr / Sharon returns home to reclaim the part of herself she left behind. She arrives in Yewville, a quiet New York suburb where her twin sister, Lily, lives with her husband and teenage daughter. Here, thousands of miles away from the scenes of her horrific crimes, she insinuates herself into Lily's community, Lily's family, Lily's life.

A novel of tense and mesmerizing power, Starr Bright Will Be with You Soon is a haunting exploration of the helplessness and rage buried deep in the female psyche—and of the intimate, unspoken bond that sisters share.


Excerpt

Soft now and spineless as a creature pried out of its shell to die on dry land the man lay at her feet. Her bare feet. She stepped back, out of the flow of blood. Blood flowing darkly from the single wound to his broken face and soaking into the cheap nylon carpet of what unknown room he'd brought her to, to rape her; what unknown cheap hotel in this Sodom and Gomorrah of the desert that God might strike with lightning to annihilate should He wish at any time. "Starr Bright" was trembling, panting. Her thoughts blasted clean. For these are the days of vengeance, that all things which are written may be fulfilled.

Reviews

  • Library Journal, December 1998, p158
  • Publishers Weekly, December 21, 1998, p51
  • Booklist, January 1, 1999, p834
  • Entertainment Weekly, March 19, 1999, p98
  • New York Times Book Review, April 11, 1999, p29

Epigraph

I resolved in my future conduct to redeem the past.

—Robert Louis Stevenson, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde

Other Editions

book cover


Page address:
http://jco.usfca.edu/works/novels/starrbright.html

 
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