Hey, all you reader guys, you get two reviews for the price of one today. The first is from that awesome reviewer Michael:
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Blog: Boys Rule Boys Read! (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Cosmic Repair Boys, Mark Dunn, Fran Cannon Slayton, When the Whistle Blows, Add a tag
Blog: A Patchwork of Books (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Fran Cannon Slayton, Wim Coleman, Pat Rerrin, middle grade, Add a tag
I've just read a whole bunch of historical fiction and feel my mind has traveled back in time...and is having some trouble waking up! Both of these are nice choices for library shelves.
When the Whistle Blows, by Fran Cannon Slayton, is a classic coming of age story, with some special bits added in that make this a really easy choice to hand to kids. They'll like it AND you'll like it.
Jacket description:
"When the railroad's in your blood, it draws you like a pump draws water from the ground.
Meet a town and a train and a time and a boy--Jimmy Cannon. And meet his father--as strong as a Mallet 200 locomotive--whom Jimmy simply cannot figure out! But who, in a dramatic and unexpected twist, turns out to be so much more than Jimmy ever knew.
In a book that goes to the core of boyhood--it's Halloween mischief, its hunting day mystery, itschampionship football game surprise, and its nighttime adventures--Fran Cannon Slayton brings her readers to the breathtaking crossroads of an unforgettable West Virginia railroad town, a family that matters, and adulthood itself."
The location is brilliantly described and the characters are realistic and fresh. I really enjoyed watching Jimmy blossom into his own, as well as get to know his father as both a parent and a man.
This is a quick read and a good choice to hand to a reluctant reader, as there are lots of scenes of mischief and fun, along with the more serious theme of growing up and learning to understand others.
When the Whistle Blows
Fran Cannon Slayton
176 pages
Middle Grade
Penguin Young Readers
9780399251894
June 2009
Received review copy from author
Anna's World, by Wim Coleman and Pat Perrin, takes us even further back into history---a hundred years further actually, with the story taking place in the late 1840s.
Jacket description:
"Fourteen-year-old Anna Coburn doesn't want to grapple with America's terrible issues. Just growing up seems hard enough. Forced from her home and away from her beloved father, Anna is sent to live among the stern people called Shakers. With their strange believes and strict lifestyle, the Shakers both attract and dismay the bright, headstrong Anna.
When she is reunited with her father, Anna is plunged into upper-class Boston life, where she faces mystery and danger. She also accepts her responsibility in events that will affect not only to herself and her loved ones, but a country about to come apart at the seams.
With a cast that includes Henry David Thoreau, a perceptive Shaker schoolmistress, and a murderous false friend, Anna's World is a powerful coming of age story, widely praised for its vivid characters, gripping plot, and moral stature."
I really enjoyed reading about life in a Shaker home, as that is not a topic I've explored and Anna did a great job in describing her days and frustrations. She reminded me a bit of Anne of Green Gables, in her ability to create mischief without really trying and her headstrong personality.
I also really liked the cameo appearances by different members of our history, as it made for fun little interjections in plot.
I did feel the book was a bit long and some of the scenes could have used some parring down, as well as needing some excitement on the cover. The content is great, but I felt the cover would not be inspiring kids to pick this one over something else. Other than that, a great choice for use in a Social Studies class or for a fan of historical fiction.
Anna's World
Wim Coleman & Pat Perrin
288 pages
Middle Grade
Chiron Books
9781935178064
July 2009
Received review copy from authors
Blog: Underage Reading (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: vignettes, fran cannon slayton, When the Whistle Blows, On Genre, Slayton, Fran Cannon, Add a tag
Continuing discussion of Fran Cannon Slayton’s WHEN THE WHISTLE BLOWS…
The most unusual thing about WTWB is that it’s told as a series of vignettes, one each Halloween from 1943 to 1949. At first, I found this narrative style frustrating. After the most arresting vignettes, I didn’t want to skip ahead a year; I wanted to know the aftermath.
The storytelling method grew on me, though. When I thought about it, I always did know what happened next; the vignette style was an economical way of forcing me to imagine the inevitable conclusion.
The seven-year timespan also lets the book’s central relationships — between Jimmy and his father, and Jimmy and the railroad — develop in a natural way. I recently noted, when reading JACOB HAVE I LOVED, that I think it’s rare for middle grade or young adult books to cover long periods of time (finite series like HARRY POTTER being an exception). In fact, now that I think of it, taking place over a particularly long timespan is one of the things that makes even a book that takes place mostly in adolescence come across to me as an “adult book.” It must be something about developing an implicitly adult perspective, looking back on life.
Anyway: one consequence of this tendency toward compressed time is that the conflict sometimes has to develop and be resolved artificially quickly — or at least, books have to take place during periods of crisis, in which a timespan of a few months can carry a narrative arc for something as major as the evolution of a son’s relationship with his father.
WHEN THE WHISTLE BLOWS, on the other hand, is a more naturalistic kind of story, where the changes between some years are subtle; others, more dramatic; and the story as a whole unfolds lackadaisically without wasting time. It’s a nicely different addition to my bookcase.
Posted in On Genre, Slayton, Fran Cannon, When the Whistle BlowsBlog: Underage Reading (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: railroads, fran cannon slayton, When the Whistle Blows, The Literary is Political, Slayton, Fran Cannon, eugene debs, Add a tag
I just read an Advanced Reader Copy of Fran Cannon Slayton’s debut middle-grade novel, WHEN THE WHISTLE BLOWS, after winning it as part of a prize pack of debut novels.
The book — set in 1940s Virginia — is half about the protagonist Jimmy’s relationship with his dad (the mom is such a minor character that I kept forgetting she was living; more distortions of my fairy tale-centric childhood?). And it’s half about Jimmy’s relationship with the book’s other central character: the railroad where the family’s men work, and where Jimmy is desperate to go to work himself.
The centrality of the railroad had a special resonance for me because I read a ton about Eugene Debs last summer, including Ray Ginger’s beautiful biography THE BENDING CROSS. Debs grew up as the railroad era was beginning, and it was the major influence on his early life; he was enthralled with their power, and he dropped out of school to work for them as soon as he could, as a 16-year-old in 1871 — exactly what Slayton’s Jimmy wishes his father would let him do. In fact, though, Debs was later bitterly regretful at having truncated his formal education; I think he’d have been the first to tell Jimmy to listen to his father.
But he’d also have understood Jimmy’s desperate drive to grow up, to take a ‘man’s job,’ and most of all, to do it on the railroads. Debs quit railroading only a few years in, with extreme reluctance, prevailed upon by his mother’s concern for his safety. As emerges in Slayton’s story, railroad work was immensely dangerous; in Debs’s time, the railroad workers’ associations (called Brotherhoods) were basically insurance clubs whose main function was issuing death benefits to the widows of men killed on the job.
But Debs, still fascinated by the railroad he was no longer working for and desperate to avoid the boring life of a retail clerk, leaped into organizing the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen, transforming it into a true union and leading the first national strike in U.S. history. It was 1877, and he was 22 years old. Debs’s increasing recognition of the depth of exploitation in the railroad industry, the tight collaboration among its monopolistic owners and the government, the violence with which they would maintain the profitability of their industry, and the inability of conservative union professionals to challenge any part of this, helped him to become possibly the most important labor leader in American history. His own obsession with the railroad was emblematic of his era; the class struggle this led him to spark would define the next era.
Slayton’s story bookends this history. Like Debs, Jimmy sees before him two possible lives — the life of a grocery clerk or life on the railroads — and knows which he wants, despite all the objections of his family. And like Debs, Jimmy finds that the railroad can’t live up to the promise it seemed to hold for his own life, and has to find a third path for himself.
But Debs’s transformation was at the beginning of the railroad era, and the era of unionization; Jimmy’s comes as its end. Whereas Debs’s disillusionment was that the railroads never lived up to the sense of social progress they seemed to promise, Jimmy’s problem is that time is progressing on, whether he likes it or not. The railroad jobs he knows are dying — the steam engines around which his entire town is organized replaced by diesel. His solution, too, will be of a more solely personal nature than Debs’s; indeed, no union is ever mentioned in the book, and his dad, who’s some sort of foreman, pays out of pocket to maintain the income of some of the displaced workers.
In that sense, I think, WHERE THE WHISTLE BLOWS isn’t only a portrayal of Jimmy’s time (which actually was itself a time of substantial and militant class struggle), but of ours: it’s a beautifully-told story of having hopes destroyed by economic forces out of one’s control, but finding recourse in one’s personal relationships and character. At this point in American history, the Debsian solution isn’t one that most people can imagine. I wonder, as the economic crisis continues, what other kinds of stories we might begin to see.
Tomorrow’s follow-up post: The unusual storytelling method of WHERE THE WHISTLE BLOWS.
Posted in Slayton, Fran Cannon, The Literary is Political, When the Whistle Blows
Thanks for sharing these. My classroom library is pretty lean in the historical fiction section. Always looking for more to add.
I'm so glad you made these comments about When The Whistle Blows. I completely agree that it's a book that kids will like, as well as parents. Funny, and also thought-provoking.
It reminded me of some of Gary Paulsen's autobiographical writing (Angel Petersen, or Harris & Me).
I can't wait to share it with students. Have you had any kids' responses yet?