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Unquestioning Companionship

Alison Bellringer Author Interview

Whisper (Book One) follows a young girl who leaves the turmoil of her family’s home with the gentle guidance of a clever dog, the first creature in her life to ever put her at ease. Where did the idea for this story come from?

I wanted to challenge myself in writing about something quite different to what was contained within any of my earlier works, in the process tackling several reasonably serious or thought-provoking themes which are concerningly becoming far too common a problem in the real world, all while keeping its use of language, and descriptive tone regarding quite sensitive subjects, aptly suitable for a younger aged audience.

Is there anything from your own life included in Britney’s traits and dialogue?

Not that I am significantly aware of. Unless you include her general love for animals, whose unique bonds with humans I always enjoy exploring in my writing, especially that of ‘man’s best friend’ and the invaluable role dogs play in their undying loyalty and unquestioning companionship with humans. While some of the themes in this book may reflect what I’ve observed in the real world, I don’t think there is anything specific that stems from personal experience besides that.

What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?

I always enjoy writing about issues such as friendship, and these books are all about how unique individuals relate to those around them, whether they’re connected by blood or circumstantially joined together through the kindness of strangers. This series wonderfully illustrates the love that can flourish between different kinds of people, young and old, when their differences are clearly put aside, and only willing acceptance and open acts of kindness are freely offered in their place. Recovering from childhood trauma and abuse are key aspects of this book, but several reviewers have expressed appreciation for how these issues have been approached with gentle sensitivity and respect, without losing any of their weight in emotional depth and overall meaning.

Can you give us a peek inside Book 2 in this series? Where will it take readers?

With Lucas (Book Two), I really appreciated having the opportunity to give readers another chance to better get to know the man who eagerly took the vulnerable Britney under his wing. Understanding more about Lucas’ background lends credence to the idea that his own childhood years had also been extremely difficult for him to overcome, which is likely a huge part of the reason why he didn’t like seeing another distraught child being caught in a similar position and quickly jumped at the prospect of taking responsibility over her care. Despite being orphaned at a young age, Lucas finds his place with a caring older couple who model compassion and kindness every day of the week, which in turn consistently serves to teach him to always treat others with the same amount of endless love and unbridled respect that they do. By continuing the series, readers will have the chance to see things from another point of view, this time from Lucas’ perspective rather than Britney’s.

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Britney is a young, extremely malnourished child, who comes from a poor family with an abusive father. Her mother does everything she can to protect her daughter from her husband, receiving the brunt of the aggressive beatings herself. The girl barely speaks, afraid of being overheard by the wrong person, and the only words she knows are the few repeated words her mother uses to calm her after a fight. A total of three words in all, namely – Whisper, Britney, and Ma. There is a very private, sheltered spot in the nearby forest which Britney uses as a place to hide away if ever her mother has to spend the day walking into the nearest town to purchase supplies or to trade goods. They have discreet, non-verbal signals which they use to keep the area hidden and make sure that Britney is secure (far away from Pa’s prying eyes). On one such day, Britney hears unusual sounds and is terrified that her father has found out about their system, but the surprise turns out to be just a lonesome little puppy. The girl quickly becomes friends with the stray, instantly joining forces in their solitude, only ever meeting in the secret place where they share such a deeply silent, unspoken bond. This continues until Ma helps her only child run away for good, tearfully leaving Britney to fend for herself in the best way she knows how. The adoring puppy (promptly being referred to as Whisper) unexpectedly follows the girl, and together they set off on a journey that will forever change their lives…


Whisper (Book One)

In Whisper (Book One), Britney grows up in a small cottage where her father’s rage rules the weather, and her mother’s only shield is a soft, urgent refrain, “Whisper.” Before Britney ever leaves home, she has a secret refuge in the woods, a hiding place where she keeps meeting the same sharp-eyed black-and-tan puppy, the first creature she feels at ease around. So when Ma finally pushes Britney onto the road with a parcel of food and one instruction, keep walking, the puppy feels like a thread she’s already been holding, tugging her toward the care of Grandma Ruby and her son Lucas, a village carpenter whose steadiness begins to re-teach Britney what safety even is.

What hit me first was the book’s emotional temperature: it starts cold, boots on floorboards, hunger, flinching, and then, page by page, it warms. I kept noticing how the author uses small domestic details (soup by the fire, a rocking chair, a gift left within reach) as proof-of-kindness rather than decoration. Britney’s limited early vocabulary isn’t a gimmick; it’s part of the story’s bruise-realism, and watching her language return as trust returns felt quietly triumphant, like seeing color seep back into a washed-out photograph.

My other big reaction was how central Whisper is, not as a magical fix, but as a vigilant, bodily presence: heartbeat, warmth, barking at the wrong person, standing guard when humans can’t. The dog becomes Britney’s external courage, the part of her that can snarl when she can’t. And when the past finally lumbers back into the village in a “pleasant” voice Britney recognizes anyway, the tension is the good kind, tight as twine, because the book refuses to pretend that fear evaporates just because years have passed.

Whisper is best for middle-grade readers who can handle heavy themes with a hopeful landing, especially kids drawn to middle-grade historical fiction, family drama, survival adventure, and animal companion stories. If your shelf has space for the tender grit of Kate DiCamillo, or the heart-healing dog-thread of Because of Winn-Dixie, this one belongs nearby. And when the book reaches its final turn toward chosen family and hard-won forgiveness, it earns it with work, not wishful thinking.

Pages: 75 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0D3LSF7MR

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