ID | Title | Characters | Setting | Brief Review (Events) | Number of pages or number of words | Additional information | Box # | Folder # | Date published |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
151 | Whistle | Roper Beanie Chevy Math Taylor Bloop Mama Lou Boss Louise Sweet |
Cornerville, GA in Swanoochee County | Roper
is illiterate. He is poor, hardworking black man in the unforgiving
heart of south Georgia, striving each day to put distance between his
new life and his probation for a petty crime one year earlier. His
routine is his savior: At sunrise he mounts the tractor belonging to
Math Taylor, a prominent white landowner, and grooms the vast grounds of
the Taylor home until one morning, when Roper's routine goes terribly
wrong. While mowing the tall grass at the back end of the property, he
comes across the body of his boss's wife, dead of a heart attack. In a
moment of panic, terrified that he'll be blamed for her death and sent
back to jail, Roper hides her body where it will not be found. With the ensuing days and weeks comes a painstaking, and fruitless, search for the missing woman. The police want to interview Roper, to ask him if he happened to see Lora Taylor before her mysterious disappearance. After all wasn't he running the tractor around the time she vanished? Now Roper is not sure he did the right thing. He should have called for help. And there is no way he can come forward at this point. As the investigation begins and the tragedy hits the evenings news, Roper is nearly crippled with self-induced fear and paranoia. A gritty novel so suspense, Whistle is a powerful departure for acclaimed southern novelist Janice Daugharty. |
217 | Whistle-Original draft | 29 | 1 | 1998 |