Raft of Stars: A Novel

Raft of Stars: A Novel

by Andrew J. Graff

Narrated by Lincoln Hoppe

Unabridged — 11 hours, 45 minutes

Raft of Stars: A Novel

Raft of Stars: A Novel

by Andrew J. Graff

Narrated by Lincoln Hoppe

Unabridged — 11 hours, 45 minutes

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Overview

“A rousing adventure yarn full of danger and heart and humor.”*-Richard Russo

An instant classic for fans of*Jane Smiley and*Kitchens of the Great Midwest: when two hardscrabble young boys think they've committed a crime, they flee into the Northwoods of Wisconsin. Will the adults trying to find and protect them reach them before it's too late?

It's the summer of 1994 in Claypot, Wisconsin, and the lives of ten-year-old Fischer “Fish” Branson and Dale “Bread” Breadwin are shaped by the two fathers they don't talk about.

One night, tired of seeing his best friend bruised and terrorized by his no-good dad, Fish takes action. A gunshot rings out and the two boys flee the scene, believing themselves murderers. They head for the woods, where they find their way onto a raft, but the natural terrors of Ironsforge gorge threaten to overwhelm them.

Four adults track them into the forest, each one on a journey of his or her own. Fish's mother Miranda, a wise woman full of fierce faith; his granddad, Teddy, who knows the woods like the back of his hand; Tiffany, a purple-haired gas station attendant and poet looking for connection; and Sheriff Cal, who's having doubts about a life in law enforcement.

The adults track the boys toward the novel's heart-pounding climax on the edge of the gorge and a conclusion that beautifully makes manifest the grace these characters find in the wilderness and one another. This timeless story of loss, hope, and adventure runs like the river itself amid the vividly rendered landscape of the Upper Midwest.


Editorial Reviews

MAY 2021 - AudioFile

Narrator Lincoln Hoppe’s delivery is measured as he gives unique personalities to the characters in Graff’s debut novel. Fish and Bread are two 10-year-old boys who are on the run in the northern Wisconsin wilderness after Fish shoots Bread’s father in the head. They speak in short, declarative sentences as they navigate the wilderness, their fear, and the weight of their actions. Teddy, Fish’s wise grandfather, and Cal, a transplanted Texan who is the new sheriff, are on their trail. Teddy’s gruff voice is often impatient as he deals with the sheriff’s lack of knowledge and experience. Cal lacks a Texas drawl as he navigates his doubts and the new world he finds himself in. Fish’s mother, Miranda; 20-something Tiffany; and Constable Bobby add further dimension to the story. N.E.M. © AudioFile 2021, Portland, Maine

Publishers Weekly

01/25/2021

Though set in 1994, the wilderness odyssey that shapes Graff’s rewarding coming-of-age debut has a timeless, archetypal resonance. After the death of Fischer “Fish” Branson’s father, Fish spends summers with his grandfather Teddy in tiny Claypot, Wis. His best friend there is Dale “Bread” Breadwin, whose dad, Jack, is an abusive drunk. After Fish impulsively shoots Jack in an attempt to end Bread’s suffering, the two 10-year-olds mistakenly assume he is dead. They pilfer supplies, leave a note for Teddy, and hide in the dense woods that border the town while they improvise a raft to flee Claypot by river. Teddy and the town sheriff, Cal, a burned-out former cop from Texas, look for them on horseback, while Fish’s fiercely spiritual mom mounts a search by canoe with a young woman who works at a gas station and shares with Cal an unspoken attraction. By the time these six converge at a perilous waterfall, each has come to know more about themselves and each other. Though the resolution yields few surprises, Graff depicts the harsh Northwoods setting and his misfit characters’ inner lives with equal skill. The dynamic quest narrative offers plenty of rich moments. Agent: Janet Silver, Aevitas Creative. (Mar.)

From the Publisher

[An] exquisitely crafted novel about two 10-year-old boys on the lam on a river raft. . . .  The art and craft of this narrative, apparent from the first page with its sublime constellations of images, offers brutal beauty, the glinting edge of truth, and the possibility of redemption for the fifth-grade boys, and also for the adults chasing them. Finding their way through the thick, gnarled woods and along the perilous river, both children and adults show they can transcend the thicket of confusion surrounding their personal circumstances and emerge toward more clarity.” — Boston Globe

“Andrew J. Graff’s engrossing, largehearted debut novel, Raft of Stars, is a book with a distinctly Rousseauian vibe. It is the story of what happens when two 10-year-old boys flee into the northern Wisconsin woods and how they, and their various adult pursuers, don’t merely survive, but shed their landlocked inhibitions and become better, bigger versions of themselves. . .Despite brushes with danger and death — roaring rapids, charging bears, loaded rifles, hunger — they don’t turn inward, nor do they turn against one another. No one goes Lord of the Flies. Instead, they do what they haven’t felt free to do in civilization: open up and cry, reveal their regrets and fears and needs.” — The New York Times Book Review

“Outdoorsy tales like this, from Hemingway’s early Michigan stories to James Dickey’s Deliverance on down, typically use woods and waterways as proving grounds for masculinity. But Graff...wants to unravel some of the expectations of the genre. Nature, here, isn’t impressed with masculinity at all, and it’s prepared to smash machismo against its rocks along with anything else. . . Graff writes exquisitely about the wilderness,...[and] recognizes that his main job is to deliver a gripping adventure tale, which the concluding chapters offer plenty of — dangerous rapids leading to life-threatening waterfalls, menacing black bears and coyotes.”  — Washington Post

“The story will beg you to grab the person beside you, tilt the cover toward them, and ask, "Have you read this yet?" It will inevitably gift you a glorious post-book reading haze, a fog following you from room to room, trailed by a story you can't get out of your mind. Raft of Stars is a clarion call to the wild softness in all of us. It is a book to read, and read, and read again." — Country Living

“I had no idea people wrote books like Andrew J. Graff’s Raft of Stars anymorea rousing adventure yarn full of danger and heart and humor and characters worth worrying about. It’s as if, after observing the deplorable state we’re all in right now, the author took it upon himself to raise our collective spirits. Bravo!” — Richard Russo, author of Empire Falls and Chances Are...

“An adventurous tale of misfit characters and a humble riverboat.” — Parade (“A Must-Read Book of Spring”)

“A heartfelt and enjoyable story with a welcome and genuine sense of place.” — Milwaukee Magazine

“The characters are expertly drawn in their shifting relationships . . . Both an engaging adventure and a profound reflection on human bonding, what it means to be a man (and a good one), and the importance of persevering. . . . Highly recommended, whether you want literate thrills or thoughtful, affirming meditation.” — Library Journal (starred review)

“But then I read a book like Raft of Stars, and I am again filled with wonder. Not just at nature–at rivers, forests, and fields–but at my children themselves….That folks such as Andrew Graff write novels like this is, for me, a sign of great hope.” — Front Porch Republic

“Impressive . . . [Graff’s] background as a hunter and a hiker gives him plenty of raw material to make the natural trials faced by Fish and Bread and their trackers realistic and, at times, harrowing. Besides whitewater, there’s violent weather, bears and the uncertainty of who will find the boys, if anyone, and when.” — St. Louis Post-Dispatch

“RAFT OF STARS is a dark, dreamy, adrenaline-spiked escape into [the] Midwest wilderness. . . . RAFT OF STARS is both a plot-driven wilderness adventure and a fragile coming-of-age story. Graff captures the pure connection between friends on the cusp of adulthood, struggling to love parents with sometimes-unforgivable imperfections, and the world created by his powerful, thrumming style is not so much a setting as it is a star-shot forest dreamscape of cedar trees, prowling coyotes, and sun-bleached scarecrows made of bone.”
Popsugar

“You’ll be so busy savoring this deliciously-written tale that the only thing you’ll truly care about is that this book lingers, like a soft summer night, so grab Raft of Stars and run with it.” — Yankton Daily Press

“The wilderness odyssey that shapes Graff’s rewarding coming-of-age debut has a timeless, archetypal resonance. . . .  Graff depicts the harsh Northwoods setting and his misfit characters’ inner lives with equal skill. The dynamic quest narrative offers plenty of rich moments.” — Publishers Weekly

"Rural Wisconsin in the mid-1990s is the setting for Graff’s memorable story of loss, violence, adventure, and redemption. . . . Graff’s characters have heart to spare, and his affection for this rugged part of the country is infectious. His coming-of-age story offers us nostalgia and escape, and he reminds us that while freedom can be elusive, the people who love you always make your life worth living.” — Kirkus Reviews

“Reminiscent of stories like Stand By Me and Have You Seen Luis Velez?, Graff's debut novel will enchant fans of Chris Cleave and Melissa Bank. Graff's narrative voice is lyrical, with a Southern Gothic edge that fits surprisingly well with the Wisconsin Northwoods setting. Exploring the necessity of the stories we tell ourselves to survive, Raft of Stars is a clever, compelling coming-of-age tale.” — Booklist

"Graff has crafted not only an adventure story with a warm heart at its center, but a whole town of characters for readers to fall in love with." — J. Ryan Stradal, author of The Lager Queen of Minnesota

“In ruggedly beautiful prose, and with a deep affection for his damaged, but always loveable characters, Graff delivers a novel with real heart and soul.  An authentic look into the heartland of America, into one-parent households, where mothers and grandparents are supporting the next generation while fathers are either absentee, or should be.  Like a barrel going over a waterfalls, Raft of Stars sweeps its reader downstream, and fast.  Hold on for the ride.”  — Nickolas Butler, author of Little Faith

Milwaukee Magazine

A heartfelt and enjoyable story with a welcome and genuine sense of place.

Boston Globe

[An] exquisitely crafted novel about two 10-year-old boys on the lam on a river raft. . . .  The art and craft of this narrative, apparent from the first page with its sublime constellations of images, offers brutal beauty, the glinting edge of truth, and the possibility of redemption for the fifth-grade boys, and also for the adults chasing them. Finding their way through the thick, gnarled woods and along the perilous river, both children and adults show they can transcend the thicket of confusion surrounding their personal circumstances and emerge toward more clarity.

Parade (“A Must-Read Book of Spring”)

An adventurous tale of misfit characters and a humble riverboat.

Washington Post

Outdoorsy tales like this, from Hemingway’s early Michigan stories to James Dickey’s Deliverance on down, typically use woods and waterways as proving grounds for masculinity. But Graff...wants to unravel some of the expectations of the genre. Nature, here, isn’t impressed with masculinity at all, and it’s prepared to smash machismo against its rocks along with anything else. . . Graff writes exquisitely about the wilderness,...[and] recognizes that his main job is to deliver a gripping adventure tale, which the concluding chapters offer plenty of — dangerous rapids leading to life-threatening waterfalls, menacing black bears and coyotes.” 

Front Porch Republic

But then I read a book like Raft of Stars, and I am again filled with wonder. Not just at nature–at rivers, forests, and fields–but at my children themselves….That folks such as Andrew Graff write novels like this is, for me, a sign of great hope.

Richard Russo

I had no idea people wrote books like Andrew J. Graff’s Raft of Stars anymore—a rousing adventure yarn full of danger and heart and humor and characters worth worrying about. It’s as if, after observing the deplorable state we’re all in right now, the author took it upon himself to raise our collective spirits. Bravo!

St. Louis Post-Dispatch

Impressive . . . [Graff’s] background as a hunter and a hiker gives him plenty of raw material to make the natural trials faced by Fish and Bread and their trackers realistic and, at times, harrowing. Besides whitewater, there’s violent weather, bears and the uncertainty of who will find the boys, if anyone, and when.

The New York Times Book Review

Andrew J. Graff’s engrossing, largehearted debut novel, Raft of Stars, is a book with a distinctly Rousseauian vibe. It is the story of what happens when two 10-year-old boys flee into the northern Wisconsin woods and how they, and their various adult pursuers, don’t merely survive, but shed their landlocked inhibitions and become better, bigger versions of themselves. . .Despite brushes with danger and death — roaring rapids, charging bears, loaded rifles, hunger — they don’t turn inward, nor do they turn against one another. No one goes Lord of the Flies. Instead, they do what they haven’t felt free to do in civilization: open up and cry, reveal their regrets and fears and needs.

Country Living

The story will beg you to grab the person beside you, tilt the cover toward them, and ask, "Have you read this yet?" It will inevitably gift you a glorious post-book reading haze, a fog following you from room to room, trailed by a story you can't get out of your mind. Raft of Stars is a clarion call to the wild softness in all of us. It is a book to read, and read, and read again."

Washington Post

Outdoorsy tales like this, from Hemingway’s early Michigan stories to James Dickey’s Deliverance on down, typically use woods and waterways as proving grounds for masculinity. But Graff...wants to unravel some of the expectations of the genre. Nature, here, isn’t impressed with masculinity at all, and it’s prepared to smash machismo against its rocks along with anything else. . . Graff writes exquisitely about the wilderness,...[and] recognizes that his main job is to deliver a gripping adventure tale, which the concluding chapters offer plenty of — dangerous rapids leading to life-threatening waterfalls, menacing black bears and coyotes.” 

Country Living

The story will beg you to grab the person beside you, tilt the cover toward them, and ask, "Have you read this yet?" It will inevitably gift you a glorious post-book reading haze, a fog following you from room to room, trailed by a story you can't get out of your mind. Raft of Stars is a clarion call to the wild softness in all of us. It is a book to read, and read, and read again."

Parade (“A Must-Read Book of Spring”)

An adventurous tale of misfit characters and a humble riverboat.

Booklist

Reminiscent of stories like Stand By Me and Have You Seen Luis Velez?, Graff's debut novel will enchant fans of Chris Cleave and Melissa Bank. Graff's narrative voice is lyrical, with a Southern Gothic edge that fits surprisingly well with the Wisconsin Northwoods setting. Exploring the necessity of the stories we tell ourselves to survive, Raft of Stars is a clever, compelling coming-of-age tale.

Popsugar

RAFT OF STARS is a dark, dreamy, adrenaline-spiked escape into [the] Midwest wilderness. . . . RAFT OF STARS is both a plot-driven wilderness adventure and a fragile coming-of-age story. Graff captures the pure connection between friends on the cusp of adulthood, struggling to love parents with sometimes-unforgivable imperfections, and the world created by his powerful, thrumming style is not so much a setting as it is a star-shot forest dreamscape of cedar trees, prowling coyotes, and sun-bleached scarecrows made of bone.”

J. Ryan Stradal

"Graff has crafted not only an adventure story with a warm heart at its center, but a whole town of characters for readers to fall in love with."

Nickolas Butler

In ruggedly beautiful prose, and with a deep affection for his damaged, but always loveable characters, Graff delivers a novel with real heart and soul.  An authentic look into the heartland of America, into one-parent households, where mothers and grandparents are supporting the next generation while fathers are either absentee, or should be.  Like a barrel going over a waterfalls, Raft of Stars sweeps its reader downstream, and fast.  Hold on for the ride.” 

Yankton Daily Press

You’ll be so busy savoring this deliciously-written tale that the only thing you’ll truly care about is that this book lingers, like a soft summer night, so grab Raft of Stars and run with it.

Booklist

Reminiscent of stories like Stand By Me and Have You Seen Luis Velez?, Graff's debut novel will enchant fans of Chris Cleave and Melissa Bank. Graff's narrative voice is lyrical, with a Southern Gothic edge that fits surprisingly well with the Wisconsin Northwoods setting. Exploring the necessity of the stories we tell ourselves to survive, Raft of Stars is a clever, compelling coming-of-age tale.

Library Journal

★ 12/01/2020

DEBUT In 1990s northern Wisconsin, 10-year-old Fischer "Fish" Branson and Dale "Bread" Breadwin flee into the woods after believing that Fish has killed Bread's abusive father, eventually constructing a raft to carry them down a dangerous river. They're followed by four adults frantic to save them: woebegone sheriff Cal, newly arrived in Wisconsin and beginning to doubt his calling; gas station attendant Tiffany, a poet and outsider secretly longing for Cal; Fish's mother, a fierce Pentecostal not above cursing when she rides the rapids; and Fish's tough, wilderness-smart grandfather. The characters are expertly drawn in their shifting relationships, and the two boys' closeness and bravery are especially affecting. Realistically, they have moments of genuine tension in a narrative that is both an engaging adventure and a profound reflection on human bonding, what it means to be a man (and a good one), and the importance of persevering. Indeed, some iteration of the word hope appears nearly 100 times in the book, yet the result is never treacly; facing the life issues examined here in an unforgiving if beautifully rendered wilderness is no easy feat. VERDICT Highly recommended, whether you want literate thrills or thoughtful, affirming meditation.—Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal

MAY 2021 - AudioFile

Narrator Lincoln Hoppe’s delivery is measured as he gives unique personalities to the characters in Graff’s debut novel. Fish and Bread are two 10-year-old boys who are on the run in the northern Wisconsin wilderness after Fish shoots Bread’s father in the head. They speak in short, declarative sentences as they navigate the wilderness, their fear, and the weight of their actions. Teddy, Fish’s wise grandfather, and Cal, a transplanted Texan who is the new sheriff, are on their trail. Teddy’s gruff voice is often impatient as he deals with the sheriff’s lack of knowledge and experience. Cal lacks a Texas drawl as he navigates his doubts and the new world he finds himself in. Fish’s mother, Miranda; 20-something Tiffany; and Constable Bobby add further dimension to the story. N.E.M. © AudioFile 2021, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

2020-12-25
Two boys involved in a shooting flee into the Wisconsin north woods and build a raft to escape down a raging river.

Rural Wisconsin in the mid-1990s is the setting for Graff’s memorable story of loss, violence, adventure, and redemption. Ten-year-old Fischer “Fish” Branson, spending the summer on his grandfather’s farm, knows his friend Bread has too many bruises. When he witnesses Bread’s father beating the boy, Fish reaches for the man’s gun and fires it. In the shooting’s aftermath, the boys flee into the great north woods and build a raft so they can ride the river and escape the adult world. But Fish hasn’t told Bread the truth about their final destination. Their pursuers are trying to outrun their own sorrows, too: Teddy, Fish’s grandfather, a stoic Korean War veteran; Cal, the town sheriff, who doesn’t want to be sheriff anymore; Miranda, Fish’s wilderness-savvy mother, who has suffered her own losses; and Tiffany, a purple-haired free spirit who works at a gas station, secretly longs for Cal, and writes poetry in her spare time. Awaiting them all are dangerous rapids no raft can survive. The action sequences are exciting, though the reader has to overlook a few unlikely scenarios and coincidences to follow this journey (why would Cal, who has no experience in the Wisconsin woods, take off on horseback without attempting to organize a larger, more efficient search party?). Still, Graff’s characters have heart to spare, and his affection for this rugged part of the country is infectious. His coming-of-age story offers us nostalgia and escape, and he reminds us that while freedom can be elusive, the people who love you always make your life worth living.

A nostalgic coming-of-age story that plays out in a wild, intriguing setting.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940173048585
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Publication date: 03/23/2021
Edition description: Unabridged
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