The wonder boy of Whistle Stop A novel

Fannie Flagg

Book - 2020

"Bud Threadgoode grew up in the bustling little railroad town of Whistle Stop, Alabama, with his mother Ruth, church going and proper, and the fun-loving hell-raiser, his Aunt Idgie. Together they ran the town's popular Whistle Stop Café, known far and wide for its famous "Fried Green Tomatoes." And as Bud often said of his childhood, "How lucky can you get?" But sadly, the railroad yards began to shut down and the town became a ghost town, with nothing left but boarded-up buildings and memories of a happier time. Then one day, Bud decides to take one last trip, just to see where his beloved Whistle Stop used to be. In so doing, he discovers new surprises about Idgie's life and about other beloved Fried G...reen Tomatoes characters, and about the town itself. He also sets off a series of events, both touching and inspiring, which change his life and the lives of his daughter and others. Could these events all be just coincidences? Or something else? And can you go home again?"--

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Subjects
Genres
Novels
Domestic fiction
Published
New York : Random House [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
Fannie Flagg (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
pages ; cm
ISBN
9780593133842
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

The notion that you can't go home againis a cliché, but when home is Whistle Stop, Alabama, it is grounded in truth. In the 80-plus years since Bud Threadgoode was a boy whose life revolved around the Whistle Stop Café his mother ran with his Aunt Idgie, Bud has longed to return. Bud now lives in a retirement community with very strict rules about leaving the facility, but he puts his Threadgoode wiles to work and finagles a trip back home. Trouble is, Whistle Stop doesn't exist any more. Kudzu overpowers the buildings and there's not a landmark to be found. Enter a fairy godmother in the person of the fabulously wealthy Evelyn Couch, who befriends Bud's daughter, Ruthie. Between them, the women concoct a scheme that may just give the lie to that old cliché and grant Bud his dying wish. All the down-home characters, rural wisdom, and effervescent charm of Flagg's endearing 1987 novel, Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Café come back to life in this return to one of the most beloved locales in Southern fiction.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Flagg's memorable cast returns to Whistle Stop, Ala., made famous in Fried Green Tomatoes, in this heartfelt saga. As the characters age, they reflect on the 1930s, when the town was a lively, bustling place--but time hasn't been kind to the hamlet, and it has become decrepit. In its heyday, Dot Weems ran the post office and published a town newsletter ("No gossip, just the plain facts, folks!"), and best friends Ruth and Idgie ran the Whistle Stop Cafe. Over time, townspeople scatter yet remain connected by Dot's yearly holiday letters. In 1985, Ruth's granddaughter, Ruthie, gets engaged to Brooks, an Atlanta society man. Shortly after Brooks dies of a heart attack in 2013, their two children leave Atlanta, and Ruthie receives a call from her father Bud's retirement community saying Bud's gone missing. As it happens, Bud is on his way back to Whistle Stop, propelled by memories of the past; meanwhile, his disappearance becomes a major news story, and Evelyn, a wealthy friend of one of Bud's deceased relatives, hears about Bud's disappearance and forms a friendship with Ruthie that changes both of their lives. Flagg's multitude of fans will enjoy reminiscing and learning more secrets from her well-known protagonists. Agent: Jennifer Rudolph Walsh, WME. (Oct.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Fried Green Tomatoes author Flagg's latest is a current "check in" and a retrospective look at the beloved little railroad town of Whistle Stop, AL, and its quirky occupants. Down the line of descendants, we follow the life of Bud Threadgoode's daughter Ruthie (named for Bud's mother), up to the present. The story also pops back in time, revisiting some highlights of life back in Whistle Stop and unearthing a few more secrets. Dot Weems, the town's postmistress, keeps readers informed with her annual Christmas card updates. Ruthie, now an adult, settles her dad happily into a retirement home near Atlanta so she can visit often. When Bud escapes and takes a train to visit his beloved Whistle Stop one last time, he is devastated to see it abandoned and unrecognizable. An unexpected turn of events involving Bud losing his prosthetic arm connects Ruthie with an older Evelyn Couch, and the two become friends. When the new pals eventually hatch a plan to use Evelyn's overflowing wealth (thanks to Ninny Threadgoode again!) to restore Whistle Stop, the fun really starts. VERDICT Who can resist a visit to Whistle Stop and all her inhabitants, past and present? No one!--Beth Gibbs, Davidson, NC

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Back to the Whistle Stop Cafe, in a story ranging from the 1930s to the present day. The setting of Flagg's Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe (1987), beloved both in print and on film, returns in a sweet ol' novel which could not possibly be less of the moment. That sound you hear? A gazillion fans rejoicing. The update includes several of the original characters--largely a bunch of good-hearted white people and a couple of meanies--from a small town outside Birmingham, Alabama. By the 1990s, it turns out, the whole town is in ruins and its denizens in diaspora throughout the South, mostly kept in touch by Dot Weems, who eventually replaced her long-running newsletter, The Weems Weekly, with Christmas letters and occasional bulletins. The titular wonder boy is the one-armed prince Bud Threadgoode, son of the late Ruth Jamison, who owned the cafe in the 1930s with her partner, Idgie Threadgoode (sadly, no new lesbian romances this time around). In 2013, Bud is retired from his veterinary practice and living at Briarwood Manor in Atlanta, where he moved when his ailing wife, Peggy, became too hard to care for without help. Though healthy himself, he decided to stay on after her death even though his daughter, Ruthie, widowed young, has begged him to move in with her. Unfortunately, she lives next door to her awful mother-in-law, Martha Lee Caldwell, and Bud ain't goin' there. Martha Lee is a horrible rich old Southern lady; one of the funniest moments in the book occurs when she gets her 23andMe results. Homesick for the good old days, Bud sneaks out of Briarwood to take one last glance at his hometown, and here the ambling narrative finally gets moving. Though you don't have to read the first book to understand the new one, it wouldn't hurt, either, since there's a lot of backstory filled in in clumps and you'll catch on sooner if you know who's who. Or watch the movie; Flagg was nominated for an Oscar for the screenplay. Reading this novel is like entering a second childhood. You have our permission. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Sheriff Grady Kilgore WHISTLE STOP, ALABAMA January 24, 1991 Grady Kilgore, a big barrel-chested bear of a man in his seventies, had been the sheriff of Whistle Stop, Alabama, until 1958, when he and his wife, Gladys, had moved to Tennessee. Today, Grady had driven down to Whistle Stop from Nashville with his grandson and was standing on the railroad tracks, looking across the street to where the old Whistle Stop Cafe used to be. Kudzu vines had grown all over the buildings and had covered most of the block. It was hard for his grandson to tell what was underneath. Grady pointed over to one of the buildings. "That's the old post office that Dot Weems ran, and right there's the cafe, next to Opal Butts's beauty shop, where your grandma got her hair done up every Saturday morning." Grady stood there looking around and was sad to see how much the place had changed since the last time he'd stopped by. By now, the old two-lane highway from Birmingham to Whistle Stop had been bypassed by a new six-lane interstate, and most of the area was now just a dumping ground. Old rusty cars and trucks had been abandoned by the tracks, left to slowly fall apart. Empty beer cans and whiskey bottles were everywhere. And as a sad sign of the times, Grady noticed there was a lot of drug paraphernalia scattered around that hadn't been there before. The Baptist church, where he had heard Reverend Scroggins preach every Sunday, was now almost falling down, the stained-glass windows broken, the pews removed and sold. All that was left of the town were some of the old buildings and the old Threadgoode home, and that was barely standing. Vandals had pretty much destroyed everything else. Grady turned to his grandson and shook his head. "When I get to thinkin' how this place used to be, and what it is now, it just makes me sick. It wasn't never a fancy town, but it was clean. Now there's junk scattered everywhere. And the old Threadgoode house is full of graffiti, the windows all knocked out. You'd never know to look at it now, but that house used to be the prettiest one in town. For the life of me, I still cain't figure out why Whistle Stop went to seed like it did. I even heard the whole town was sold, and they were gonna knock it all down and build a tire factory out here." Grady looked across the street again and sighed. "I don't know why they're just lettin' the old cafe sit and rot away like that. It just don't seem right. That cafe used to be like going to a good friend's house to eat. Two great gals ran it. Idgie Threadgoode and Ruth Jamison. You woulda loved 'em. Everybody in town used to eat there, all the railroad men and their families. Every Christmas Day their cook, Sipsey, and the gals would lay out a big spread, and we'd all go over and eat, open our presents, and sing carols." Then, unexpectedly, Grady let out a little sob. He quickly turned away, pulled out a handkerchief, and blew his nose and looked apologetic. "Sorry about that. Oh Lordy. I don't need to go thinkin' about the old days . . . but lots of good times were had in that old cafe with Ruth and Idgie. Ruth's son, little Buddy, grew up in that cafe. Poor kid. Lost his arm when he wasn't much older than you." Grady then carefully folded his handkerchief and put it back into his pocket. Then he said, "Now, you may not believe this, but a few years back on Christmas Day your grandma and me was over in Birmingham visiting Opal Butts, and while they were busy cooking up dinner, I snuck out and took a little ride out here. And I was standing right here, on this same spot we are now, when--real quiet like at first--I started to hear a piano playing and people laughing, and it was coming from over there, right where the cafe used to be. I looked around and there wasn't nobody there, but I swear I heard it. What do you think it could have been?" His grandson rubbed his hands together and said, "I don't know, Granddaddy, but can we go now? I'm getting cold." Dot Weems WHISTLE STOP, ALABAMA 1935 Dot Weems was a friendly little woman who just loved to chat. When she was younger, she had hoped for a literary career on the order of her idol, Edna Ferber. But at seventeen, she had fallen in love with "the man of her dreams," and had married Wilbur Weems instead. Later she would often joke that even if she hadn't become a famous novelist, she was still "a woman of letters." Aside from single-handedly running the Whistle Stop Post Office for sixteen years, Dot also wrote and published a weekly newsletter reporting on all the town's activities under a banner that read: The Weems Weekly (Whistle Stop, Alabama's weekly bulletin) "No gossip, just the plain facts, folks!" Dot had just sent out the week's newsletter, and this morning people all over Whistle Stop were busy reading it. The Weems Weekly (Whistle Stop, Alabama's weekly bulletin) November 30, 1935 The Turkey Thief Hi Gang. Well, I hope you all had a happy Thanksgiving. I know for sure that Wilbur's old hound dog, Cooter, did. Yes, that was him you saw running through town Thanksgiving Day with my freshly cooked turkey in his mouth. The one he had just snatched off the table, the minute my back was turned, trailing my stuffing all through the living room. Honestly, men and their dogs! Thank heavens my next-door neighbor, Ninny Threadgoode, took pity on us and had us over for dinner or Wilbur and I would have gone turkeyless! And not only was Ninny's turkey delicious, we also enjoyed Sipsey's sweet potato pie that Idgie sent over from the cafe. So as Mr. Shakespeare says, "All's well that ends well." Yum yum. But now to the important news: It seems we have a rare archaeological find right here in Whistle Stop! Where? According to Idgie Threadgoode, right in our very own backyard! Well, the backyard of the cafe, that is. Idgie reports that she and little Buddy were out in the back digging up red worms to go fishing with, when she dug up (hold on to your hats, folks) a five-million-year-old dinosaur tooth! Idgie has it out on display on the counter at the cafe for all to see, so if you want to take a look, go on over. Good news from the beauty shop: I am also happy to announce that Opal Butts says she finally got the hair dryer to working again, so if you missed last week's hair appointment, she will be working overtime to fit you in. I know the ladies who are going to the Elks Club dinner Saturday night will be happy to hear it. Me, too. More good news: Sheriff Grady said that other than a few minor mishaps, involving a few of our citizens and too much "Old Man Whiskey," we have been crime free for another year. Thank you, Grady. Your faithful scribe, . . . Dot Weems . . . P.S. Don't forget to tell the kids to get their letters to Santa Claus written. Remind them that it's a long way to the North Pole from Whistle Stop, and Santa needs plenty of time to make all those toys. Later that night, Wilbur Weems, a tall, thin man, was laughing when he came home for supper. As he walked in the door, he said, "Well, Dot, thanks to you, everybody in town was over at the cafe today to see that darned dinosaur tooth." Dot was putting a bowl of mashed potatoes down by his plate. "I know. I went over myself. Do you think it's real?" Wilbur sat down and took a swig of iced tea. "Knowing Idgie, I doubt it. She just loves to pull jokes. Remember that petrified two-headed frog she had in a jar last year? I found out later it was rubber." "No, you don't mean it." "Oh yeah. She told me she bought it over in Birmingham at the magic shop." "Oh my," Dot said as she sat down and passed him the cornbread. "What will that girl come up with next?" "Who knows? But whatever it is, it will be fun, you can count on that." Excerpted from The Wonder Boy of Whistle Stop: A Novel by Fannie Flagg All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.