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Everything Old Is New

Caroline Shannon Davenport Author Interview

Terror at the Sound of a Whistle is the memoir of a successful career woman who attains all she dreamt of only to realize she may have lost the only thing of worth. You tell your story with novel-like quality; what inspired you to share your story and tell it in this fashion?

I have, as near as possible, a photographic memory. I remember not just incidents from the past but whole conversations and details of where and when. I suppose for most people, it is a strange phenomenon. I draw upon it for my writing, whether non-fiction or fiction. When I started writing Terror, it came back. I heard Jimmy’s voice and mine. I felt the fear. Saw the beauty. I had known great love during that time. I wrote as if I were there once again. I was in my mind and heart.

What were some ideas that were important for you to share in this book?

I started writing this book when I was a law major in college. My father and I had many discussions about the illegal supper club and gambling casino that he and his business partner ran in our huge Victorian home when I was growing up. Dad had become obsessed with how national and local politicians and those with money and power often decided our country and legal issues. When the club operated, gambling casinos were illegal, and bars had to close at midnight. The city had a vice department that raided places like ours, but if you ran a clean operation like my parents and Jimmy’s, you paid under-the-table money, graft, and were given a free pass. Our parents were notified ahead of time when there would be a raid. They emptied most of the money from the cash registers and stuck it in the cushions of our rocking chairs. Then came the fake raid. It affected our lives immensely. I wanted the injustice brought out in the book. I knew what happened then so long ago was as relevant as what is happening today. If not more so… Everything old is new.

How did you balance the need, to be honest and authentic with the need to protect your privacy and that of others in your memoir?

I waited until our parents had passed away, and all those of us left would not be hurt. We knew. We understood. Years before, I had tried to make it into fiction by adding a phony character at the beginning and end. My agent at Curtis Brown LTD, Clyde Taylor, loved it as the true story it was without the made-up character. Clyde was also my mentor, and he was working on marketing a novel I had written when he died unexpectedly. At the time, I was getting very ill with a malady called Trigeminal neuralgia, and the devastating loss of Clyde’s demise and my illness proved too much to start seeking a new agent. I put away all my work but never stopped writing. Now, I have short stories coming out by Running Wild Press. Also, two novels will be released in the near future.

How has writing your memoir impacted or changed your life?

My writing brought to life my desire to give credence to the impact our early lives have upon us as humans. I believed my experiences had elements everyone faces, and I could help others. Our feelings and emotions of those early experiences impress upon us images of all we experienced when we were small, as though we were little sponges. It is said you can’t go home again. I say, you never leave.

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A successful career woman, at a juncture in her life, has finally attained the beautiful lifestyle, the security, all she had ever dreamt of during her trauma laden upbringing— only to realize she may have lost the only thing of worth. Fear, drama, trust, grief— and eventually, understanding and redemption dominate this novel-like memoir.

Terror at the Sound of a Whistle

Set on the outskirts of Toledo, Ohio, during the first half of the 20th century, this memoir follows Caroline, Jimmy, their families, and the ever-changing tenants who resided in bungalows on the property. Living in the same large Victorian home but on separate floors, Caroline resided with her parents on the third, while Jimmy’s family occupied the second. Below them, concealed from public view, their fathers secretly ran an illegal after-hours supper club and gambling casino on the first floor. Surrounded by figures of questionable morality, the two children found themselves isolated from their peers at school. Yet, their unusual upbringing forged a quiet, unspoken bond—one of mutual understanding and companionship that grew stronger over time.

Terror at the Sound of a Whistle is a poignant love story stretching from childhood into adulthood. However, as a memoir, it does more than recount personal memories, it reconstructs an era. The story vividly captures the hardships of post-war life, unraveling the complexities of human relationships, whether in the strained dynamics between Jake and Penny or later Jake and Beth, or in the unexpected solidarity among women brought together by shared grief Caroline’s and Jimmy’s mothers, Margie, and Pauline. Equally compelling are the men in the story, disillusioned, weighed down by unresolved trauma, their identities fractured by a world that no longer needs them as protectors yet offers little in return.

What makes this memoir stand out is its storytelling, which is sensitive, nuanced, and deeply immersive. Suspense lingers in the air, an unshakable sense of impending doom keeping the reader engaged. The author’s candid portrayal of raw pain and the devastating void left by sudden loss lends the story a haunting authenticity. One cannot help but wonder if she deliberately crafted this memoir to be as visceral and true-to-life as possible, drawing us into her past until we, too, feel like children playing make-believe once again.

Despite the sorrow woven into its pages, the memoir offers insights into life lessons hidden beneath tragedy’s weight. Emotionally gripping and beautifully written, Terror at the Sound of a Whistle is a must-read for those drawn to tragic love stories and unconventional coming-of-age narratives.

Pages: 260 | ASIN : B0CPQ5SP47

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