ISBN: 9780874173536
Binding: [Paperback]
Pages: 0
Publication date:
$18.95
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Gandydancer's Children
A Railroad Memoir
Description
The late Frank Wendell Call is very much alive in these pages as he relates the fascinating tale of the rich, adventuresome existence he lived as a child in the Nevada desert along the Southern Pacific railroad line. In November 1928, Frank E. Call, a successful salesman, moved his young family from a comfortable home in Ogden, Utah, to a tiny two-room shanty in an isolated railroad station in northeastern Nevada. He went to work as a "gandydancer," a track laborer, and planned to become a section foreman. The first part of Frank’s plan worked very well, but, the stock market crash in October 1929 and the Great Depression that followed upset his timetable.
Meanwhile, Frank and Johanne Call’s six lively children adapted to living alongside the tracks in primitive houses without electricity or indoor plumbing. The colorful narrative by the family’s oldest includes commentaries on railroading and the railroaders’ language and describes social conditions and customs existing in small-town Nevada in the early twentieth century, told from the viewpoint of the children themselves.
Reviews
“Anyone can fill a book with memories of growing up in a big city, even a small town, but it takes a gifted writer to keep a reader captivated by tales of childhood in blink-and-they’re-gone places along the railroad.” —Jane Manaster, Southwestern American Literature, Spring 2003
“There is something universal about Gandydancer’s Children. I think most readers will experience a flash of recognition from their own childhood. Who as a youth didn’t experience the longing to climb a nearby hill