Chasing Fireflies: A Novel of Discovery

by Charles Martin

Paperback, 2008

Status

Available

Call number

813.6

Publication

Thomas Nelson (2008), 352 pages

Original publication date

2007-05-27

Description

Fiction. Literature. "Never settle for less than the truth," she told him. But when you don't even know your real name, the truth gets a little complicated. It can nestle so close to home it's hard to see. It can even flourish inside a lie. And as Chase Walker discovered, learning the truth about who you are can be as elusive�??and as magical�??as chasing fireflies on a summer night. A haunting audio about fishing, baseball, home cooking, and other matters of life and

Awards

Christy Awards (Nominee — 2008)

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

352 p.; 8.38 inches

ISBN

1595543252 / 9781595543257

User reviews

LibraryThing member LaurenGommert
The first half of the book was full of slow, drawn out narrative that tempted me to quit reading. Thankfully I stuck it out and was rewarded in the second half with a strikingly personal account of one family's struggles. Though slow, and a bit wordy, I would recommend Chasing Fireflies.
LibraryThing member debs4jc
This novel intertwines several stories, that of a six year old abandoned boy, that of the journalist named Chase who takes an interest in his story, and that of Chase's adopted family--who have a whole mess of secrets that Chase is bound and determined to uncover. As Chase finds the answers to his
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questions he also grapples with issues like justice and forgiveness and how he feels about fathers.
This book has many memorable characters, especially "Uncle Willie" and it the way the stories intertwine is quite masterful. Pick this one up for a good story with many deeper truths contained within.
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LibraryThing member PamelaBarrett
Charles Martin introduces us to an old man with a huge heart, and a shady past full of unanswered questions, a young man looking for his past, a young woman lost because of her past, and a young boy with an unknown past and an uncertain future. In a setting rich with summertime memories, splashed
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with the light of fireflies on warm dark nights in Georgia, he lays out a story that rings true and lands straight in your heart.

Adding this to my favorites—it’s why I read—a book of healing, and hope that humans however damaged can find redemption and their way home. I’m happy that my friend told me about Charles Martin, I can’t wait to read more by this author.
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LibraryThing member Suzieqkc
I read this book while on vacation in the mountains. I only had a few books with me so I was 'forced' to finish it. I've read a lot of Christian fiction, and this one was decidedly different. There wasn't any proselytizing at all. I enjoyed the story, but the end came together just a little too
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conveniently .
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LibraryThing member KObooks
This was my first Charles Martin read. I felt like there were a few loose ends that weren't tied up and I didn't care for the Tommye/Chase relationship. Still, looking at the big picture, it was a beautiful story about fathers, sons, adoption and family relationships.
LibraryThing member JudithDCollins
"One of the most compelling books I have ever read and my favorite author! You will enjoy if from Atlanta (can appreicate)...a guys book but girls will love it as well! Father/son love...well written...you will be reading when when the sun comes up...have some tissue handy...heart-felt story making
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you fall in love with Unc, Chase, and all the characters...not wanting it to end and wanting more! A Must Read! "
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LibraryThing member BevFuller
I had never heard of Charles Martin until "Chasing Fireflies" was chosen for our book club. I loved it. It's like having fiction and self-help all in one book. My favorite Unc quotes are "Never corner something you know is meaner than you." and "You can put your boots in the oven, but that doesn't
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make them biscuits."
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LibraryThing member CarmenMilligan
Yes - Five stars! This is a new favorite author of mine. I read When Crickets Cry by Martin a few years ago, and find myself thinking about it every now and then. That is the mark of a favorite, in my opinion. A book you think of, dwell on, and eventually want to read again.

When you read the
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summary, how can you go wrong with a description like that? The characters are interesting, flawed, sympathetic. The story is compelling, intriguing, satisfying. But mostly, I love the writing. It's clear, clever, descriptive. Martin doesn't waste words and doesn't scrimp on them, either. He is everything I want in an author and I am very glad he has numerous books for me to enjoy.

Highly recommended!
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LibraryThing member LyndaInOregon
Chasing Fireflies is a heartstring-tug of love and loss and betrayal that’s also a love story to the Georgia Lowlands, but it’s not a construct that will withstand a great deal of scrutiny.

Chasing Fireflies centers around Chase Walker, the adult foster child of Willee and Lorna McFarland. Now a
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reporter who remains close to “Unc Willee”, Walker’s personal history of abandonment pulls him into the story of an unidentified abandoned child slowly beginning to emerge from years of trauma and abuse. And if that’s not enough to push the Angst-o-Meter into Hallmark territory, there’s a parallel plot involving a deadly feud between Willee and his brother Jack. Martin deals out the feud background sparingly – generally a better option than dumping 30 years of exposition onto one page, but at times the technique crosses over into coyness, which may put off some readers, rather than encouraging them to keep reading.

There’s plenty here to keep the pages turning. Who is the mute boy, shoved from a car moments before its cataclysmic encounter with a train? And can Chase and the Child Protective Services attorney assigned to the case ferret out the clues the boy leaves in his remarkable drawings as they attempt to identify him?

What about Jack’s daughter Tommye, who has suddenly decided to walk away from some bad life choices but chooses refuge with Unc Willee rather than with her father? (Again, readers with an I.Q. higher than their body temperature will have this one figured out way in advance, along with recognition of what’s behind Tommye’s reappearance.)

And if this isn’t enough, what about the bone-deep blood feud between Willee and Jack, which now threatens to take away what Willee holds dearest via a vague lawsuit which is never really explained.

Some of these answers become obvious to even the most casual reader as the narrative goes along; some of them just lie there in the narrative as the people supposedly looking for them pointedly ignore their flashing-neon existence. And yet this is all relatively minor stuff (along with a boatload of oddly hyphenated words apparently left over from some earlier, uncorrected typescript), and most readers will let it slide because, gee whiz, these characters are so doggone likeable (except for brother Jack, who has ascended into moustache-twirling territory long before the details of his sins are spelled out on the page).

The book’s biggest failure, however, and the one that knocks it irretrievably from a four-star rating down to a three, comes after a truly shattering climax. When All Is Revealed, the reader is still sitting there trying to make sense of the motivations behind the Deep Dark Secrets of the McFarland Brothers. It’s impossible to get into specifics here without major spoilers. Suffice to say that we don’t ever fully understand why The Bad Brother did what he did, or why The Good Brother didn’t do what he finally did 30 years later and, ultimately, what the point of Good Brother’s action was.

So, despite a resolution meant to be hopeful and healing, the whole novel makes about as much sense as a Mason jar full of fireflies, slowly going dark.
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LibraryThing member zmagic69
Another excellent book by this author.
About the importance of family especially between a boy and his father.
Throw in an age old mystery and to get another fantastic book.

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