Book Descriptions
for When the Whistle Blows by Fran Cannon Slayton
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
A story set on All Hallow’s Eve over seven years from 1943 to 1949 portrays a child, a family, and a small West Virginia railroad town all facing inevitable change. Jimmy is just a boy in 1943, full of Halloween high jinks as he and his friends plot pranks near the graveyard. He dreams of growing up and working as a mechanic at the rail depot like his father. Jimmy’s dad is a somewhat challenging, taciturn personality who expresses his love in ways that become more and more understandable to Jimmy as he becomes a teenager, just as the personalities and occasional prejudices of some of the town’s other adults—who, it turns out, are not too old for some high jinks of their own—become clearer over time. Jimmy’s dad knows that the days of steam trains are ending and keeps telling Jimmy to set his sights on a different future. Jimmy can’t imagine such profound readjustment of his dreams, until he has no choice. Author Fran Cannon Slayton’s slice-of-life novel has plenty of humor but also a compelling portrayal of a boy’s coming of age, all set against the vivid drawn backdrop of a small town in the 1940s. (Ages 11–15)
CCBC Choices 2010. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2010. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
Jimmy lives in Rowlesburg, West Virginia, during the 1940s. He does all the things boys do in the small mountain town: plays a mean game of football, pulls the unforgettable Halloween prank with his friends in ?the Platoon,? and promises to head off into the woods on the first day of hunting season? no matter what. He also knows his father belongs to a secret society, and is determined to uncover the mysteries behind it! But it is a midnight encounter with a train that shows Jimmy the man his father really is.
Newcomer Fran Cannon Slayton?s powerful first novel captures the serendipity of boyhood by shining a spotlight on the peak adventures of Jimmy?s life. But at its heart, this is a story about a boy and his father in a time when trains reigned supreme.
?When the Whistle Blows is reminiscent of classic tales by Jack London, William Golding and Robert Louis Stevenson, yet carries the remarkable, fresh voice of its author. Fran Cannon Slayton should be extremely proud of this, her debut novel.??Ellen Hopkins, author of Crank and Identical.
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.