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Linda Collison
Author
Blue Moon Luck
In 1980s West Virginia, twenty-two-year-old Chance Lee dreams of musical stardom and escaping his rural town—and is encouraged by a local fortune-teller to set his plans in motion.
Reviews
Kirkus

In the early 1980s, two aspiring musicians yearn to escape their sleepy West Virginia hometown in Collison’s (Water
Ghosts, 2015, etc.) short, lyrical novel.
Chancellor “Chance” Lee and his best friend, Tollie Osbourne, have always wanted to leave Falling Waters, West
Virginia, and from the time they’re in high school, both believe rock music can be their tickets out. Tollie is the naturally
talented one, “Jimi Hendrix re-incarnated.” Chance plays rhythm guitar and later learns the drums when the two get a
regular gig in a country band. While they wait for stardom, Tollie works construction and Chance sells the weed he
grows. The summer they’re 22, they drop $5 each on a visit to “the witch,” a woman who tells fortunes on the night of
the full moon. That’s where trouble starts. Tollie leaves the witch’s trailer dejected but tight-lipped, while Chance, told
he “was born under a bright star,” is destined to have good luck. But he needs to take advantage of his fortune, the witch
tells him: “I want you to grab on to luck when it comes around. I want you to hang on tight and see where it takes you.”
Chance is sure that his own luck will sweep Tollie along with it—they’re best friends, after all—but that night, their fates
start to diverge. Soon, Tollie’s girlfriend leaves him, and his mother dies suddenly; Chance inherits a vast sum from his
grandfather and falls for the witch’s daughter, Brigit. Can the band survive? Collison’s novel starts strong, and her
writing is evocative, as when she describes Falling Waters: “Like two old woman’s hands cupped, a little bowl in the
midst of craggy, tangled green hills.” While she takes her time establishing Chance’s and Tollie’s back stories, the
novel’s pace speeds up as it progresses. However, once the friends separate, the years pass quickly, the meditative tone
getting lost along the way.
A well-written novel that rushes through its second half; readers might want another 100 pages.
 

News
03/15/2018
Blue Moon Luck, the audiobook

Check out Joseph John Raymond Rocca's narration of Blue Moon Luck (audible.com)

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