Rating: Summary: Drill Farther into Hickam's Coalwood Roots Review: Aimlessly wandering the fiction aisles of the library, glumly looking over the "been-there-done-that" Grisham novels, wishfully scanning the Hiaasen section in slim hopes of finding something new, when out of the corner of my eye, I caught a name on a book spine: Homer H. Hickam Jr. I instantly recognized the name as a character from one of my all-time favorite movies, "October Sky". I pulled the book, expecting it to be "Rocket Boys", the memoir on which the movie was based. I had always meant to pick up that book and get more familiar with the story that so captivated me in the movie. Only, the title of this book was "The Coalwood Way". Instantly, I knew that my browsing malaise was cured (funny how that often works)!Not only did I now have a chance to get more familiar with the "Rocket Boys" story and characters, but I also had a whole other novel with which to do it. For, you see, this memoir isn't really a sequel to the aforementioned book, but actually an expansion of a section of the original story; a kind of story within a story. Think of it as zooming in on just one section of a fractal image to see all of the intricate details within the new image. The scope of the first memoir was pretty much the entire high school career of Homer (Sonny) and the Rocket Boys and focused predominantly on their exploits with amateur rocketry. But, the real charm of the original story came from the background setting and people of Coalwood, West (by God) Virginia. The boys of the Big Creek Missile Agency (BCMA) still play a big part in this story that spans basically only one year of high school from roughly Christmas of their junior year through Christmas of their senior year. However, this time around, rocketry plays second fiddle as we delve much deeper into the lush background and learn more about Sonny's deep roots in Coalwood and how really fortunate (and bittersweet) it was that he and the rest of the boys of the BCMA could escape that life. Having seen the movie first, I found myself constantly imposing the images of the actors onto the characters in the book, which wasn't always such a bad thing since all of the characters in the movie were wonderfully cast. The only time this was a problem was with the group of boys, which in the movie numbered four, but in the book numbered six! It seems that possibly as many as three characters in the books, Sherman, O'Dell and Billy, were all "merged" into one character, Sherman O'Dell, in the movie. Not much of a problem, though, as Hickam's eloquent prose quickly conjured up images for all six young men. In this story, the town of Coalwood really comes alive. I instantly felt like I could have grown up there myself and maybe, in a way, I did. Hickam has an uncanny ability to touch the heartstrings of just about any American man (and possibly woman as well) who grew up in and around that time period, regardless of geographic location. We all have either shared a common anecdote or experienced an unrequited, adolescent love like he describes in his books (I was just crushed when Ginger told him that they would just be great friends). The ending of this book did seem a bit sappy and contrived but, darn it, I felt like it really needed to have a storybook ending. The beleaguered folks of Coalwood deserved one, even if it probably didn't actually happen exactly like that (i.e. historical fiction). I immensely enjoyed this book. So much so, that I have since gone back and read the original "Rocket Boys" and then skipped forward to read the third book in the series "Sky of Stone". I'll probably also buy his non-fiction book "Torpedo Junction" and his true fiction novel "Back to the Moon". But, this is the one that started it for me. I think I have found another favorite author!
Rating: Summary: I've said it before and I'll say it again: Review: How many wonderful works of literature were we denied by Homer Hickam (not Hickham or Hickman) going into Industrial Engineering? This is the type of book that makes you yearn for the simpler, more innocent times of your childhood, no matter when you grew up. Something in each of us can identify with the antics of the Rocket Boys. I sure hope that Mr. Hickam continues to write more wonderful books such as this one and all his other works.
Rating: Summary: This book ROX!!!!!!! Review: I absolutely love this timeless classic by Homer Hickam! I'm just 17 years old, but know an awesome story when I read one! Homer's first book Rocket Boys changed my life. His book made me realize what life has in store for you when you take risks! The Coalwood Way is an excellent 2nd book in this "series". Mr. Hickam writes in such a way that it grasps you and wont let you quit reading. His style is perfect to read out loud to students in a classsroom setting. In fact, I plan on reading these books to my class when I become the band teacher I've always wanted to be. Thanx Mr. Hickam for this truly generous and awesome look into your exciting life as a coalwood boy!
Rating: Summary: A thoroughly pleasing "equal" Review: The Coalwood Way is a wonderfully written, engaging book. I am a bona fide Homer (Sonny) Hickam "groupie," I'll confess. I eagerly look forward to all his books but especially his memoirs about Coalwood. This book is simply wonderful entertainment written in such beautifully flowing prose that it's easy to forget you're reading a book. Instead, you find yourself lost in the magnificent little town of Coalwood and its colorful and engaging citizenry. If all you know of this story is the movie October Sky, forget it. The movie is a surface treatment of a magnificent and deep story of life and love in Coalwood in the 1950's and early 1960's. The movie was a Hollywood treatment that left out the better parts of Homer's books. Homer is called Sonny in these books and, of course, his dad is Homer (Senior). It's just one place the movie got it all wrong. There is a Christmas aspect to The Coalwood Way that is exciting and strangely satisfying (I'm Jewish). For one of the few times in my life, I was able to understand the Christmas spirit. Sonny Hickam taught me that in his delightful way. This book made me laugh and it made me cry. What else could possibly be wanted from a book than that? Highly, highly, highly recommended.
Rating: Summary: A Great Writer Review: The Coalwood Way, by Homer Hickam, is the sequel to October Sky. It is 1959 and the Rocket Boys are still making their handmade rockets. Homer "Sonny" Hickam is trying to prove to his father that he will go to college and succeed. Although with the mine not doing very well, it does not look like any of the Coalwood children will get very far in life. A lot of the miners have lost their jobs and Sonny's father has to make some dangerous decisions about what to do to keep the town and the mine from going poor. Sonny's mother feels cut off from her husband and the townspeople. Her role as the superintendent's wife makes things difficult with the wives of the union workers. In the bleak, cold winter months optimism is hard to come by in Coalwood. Sonny is overcome with a sense of gloom and trys desperately to figure out what is causing it. When Coalwood is in need of some spirt-lifting, Sonny and his friends bring back the spirit of Christmas just in time. Hickam's story brings the characters from his childhood to life in a touching tale that provokes the mood of the mid-twentieth century. Sonny learns many things about his brother and his parents throughout the story. His father is a workaholic who feels responsible and inadequate, and his mother is very intelligent and perceptive who feels isolated from her whole family. Sonny moves from childhood to adulthood in a few short months as Coalwood changes in many different ways. The story reminds us of the importance of keeping our dreams and not letting little things or big things change them. It also remids us that growing up is hard, yet possible. If we stay together with our friends and family and we we pray and learn to live together, then we can get through anything.
Rating: Summary: The Coalwood Way Review Review: The Coalwood Way, by Homer Hickam, is the sequel to October Sky. It is 1959 and the Rocket Boys are still making their handmade rockets. Homer "Sonny" Hickam is trying to prove to his father that he will go to college and succeed. Although with the mine not doing very well, it does not look like any of the Coalwood children will get very far in life. A lot of the miners have lost their jobs and Sonny's father has to make some dangerous decisions about what to do to keep the town and the mine from going poor. Sonny's mother feels cut off from her husband and the townspeople. Her role as the superintendent's wife makes things difficult with the wives of the union workers. In the bleak, cold winter months optimism is hard to come by in Coalwood. Sonny is overcome with a sense of gloom and trys desperately to figure out what is causing it. When Coalwood is in need of some spirt-lifting, Sonny and his friends bring back the spirit of Christmas just in time. Hickam's story brings the characters from his childhood to life in a touching tale that provokes the mood of the mid-twentieth century. Sonny learns many things about his brother and his parents throughout the story. His father is a workaholic who feels responsible and inadequate, and his mother is very intelligent and perceptive who feels isolated from her whole family. Sonny moves from childhood to adulthood in a few short months as Coalwood changes in many different ways. The story reminds us of the importance of keeping our dreams and not letting little things or big things change them. It also remids us that growing up is hard, yet possible. If we stay together with our friends and family and we we pray and learn to live together, then we can get through anything.
Rating: Summary: Carry me back to West Virginia Review: The first paragraph took me back to a movie about these same characters in the same setting. Sure enough, the jacket tells us "Coalwood" is from the author of "Rocket Boys"--the memoir on which the film "October Sky" was based.
But this is not a sequel so much as it is a second look; nor is it a memoir so much as a stream of reveries, loosely woven around the disparate themes of Appalachian poverty, small town society, union-management conflict, teenage romance, and intra-family relationships. The author says he vividly recalls the episodes he relates after all these 40 years, and that, as Quentin would say, is prodigious.
For all that, the book is fun to read in the same sense a Walt Disney movie is fun to watch. Both are G-rated and have happy endings, and both give us an escape. Moreover, the author and the characters,(except for the absurd Quentin), speak with a homey vocabulary.
Though the book is as densly populated as a Dickens novel, chararacter development is not this author's long suit. Indeed, we're left with the feeling of having merely brushed by most of the people we encounter. Take O'Dell, who charms the socks off the staid Mrs. Hickam with such ease that I felt sure we were about to meet an Appalachian Eddy Haskell. Alas, he just never fills out.
Then there are the nagging implausibles:
In describing a new rocket nozzle the narrator tells us "[it was] a shade too large, probably because of me (sic) trying to design with a fat lead pencil and a large scale ruler". Come on now. This is a rocket engineer talking; one who must be well versed in mechanical drawing, and who's bound to know that though drawings are made to scale (within media limits) it's the written dimensions which determine exactly how a part gets built.
As for the home-made theodolite the boys use calculate a rocket's apogee, we're told that they taught themselves how to do this after someone "gave them an old trigonometry book" (groan, groan). The author says he was studying calculus, for which, as any high schooler will tell you, trig is a pre-req, and calculating of the height of a flagpole from the length of it's shadow is one of the first trig exercises.
Nor does it make any sense at all to suppose that a boy who studied physics and calculus wouldn't even recognize a slide rule or drawing instruments.
I enjoyed the book for all that; of course I liked Davy Crocket and Old Yeller too.
Rating: Summary: A compelling portrayal of Coalwood Review: There is something about Mr. Hickam's writing that draws you in immediately. It seems that each and every word that he writes is meaningful not just as a word in a sentence, but in the overall context of the novel. It is almost like poetry, but a kind of no-frills, down-to-earth poetry. But it is not really the words that you recognize when you read the novel. It is more the way he tells you the story, the patient, completely trusting way that you learn about him. He writes this book for the whole world to see, and you get the feeling that he bares his soul and trusts you completely. It is this trusting ability that he imparts that is so compelling about his works because although he is a great writer and shaper of phrases, it is ultimately his voice, even more than his message, which will keep you focused in the novel. Moreover, he has a gift of being able to impart whatever feelings he has at the moment onto the page, and in doing so, puts you into his world. This novel has been called an equal of Rocket Boys, but I think that in some ways, this novel is even better. It focuses more on the people of the town instead of showing Mr. Hickam's childhood. I also find this novel more honest and realistic of the his life. There are parts in Rocket Boys where you don't get the full story and which are covered in this book. These parts may not be the wonderful, life-always-turns-out-great kind of stories, but that's life. I think that the idea that life's not always fair, but you do what you can is conveyed even more clearly in this novel than in Rocket Boys. Having said all this though, I must admit that I like Rocket Boys more. It is not that this book is written more poorly (no, on the contrary, this book feels more mature), but simply because I enjoyed the details of Mr. Hickams early forays into the world of rocketry in that earlier book. However, The Coalwood Way is most certainly my second favorite book and I would recommend everyone to read this fascinating memoir.
Rating: Summary: Relentlessly heartbreaking... Review: This book is not about rockets. But then, neither was Rocket Boys, when you think about it. Rockets happen to be the glue that held the vignettes in the first story together, but it's so much more than that. It is a memoir in the truest sense of the word, getting you into Sonny's skin and letting you see and feel the world, in all its coldness and warmth, through his eyes. This book is even more a series of vignettes than the first one, because some of the stories seem to stand almost on their own, ala James Herriot. But it is a deeper, more moving and more relentlessly heartbreaking read than Rocket Boys, because Sonny is experiencing some really tough times. Anyone who has a long-dead father they are still trying to please (I don't, so can't empathize as much) will be crying as they read this book. But I say this in a good way. The same warmth is still there, and even when it is not, when he feels cold toward the world or misses an opportunity, Sonny beats himself over the head, so you don't have to. All of Homer's books are too good to miss, and this one is no exception.
Rating: Summary: Entertaining memoir Review: This is not to the same level of The Rocket Boys, which is a story much better told. However, The Coalwood Way is an interesting read, especially for those who truly liked The Rocket Boys. For one thing, i was a bit disappointed about the author's foreword. He swears that even though the events in the book passed so long ago (1959), he remembers everything in tremendous detail. If he hadn't said that, i wouldn't have even thought about it. As a person with very bad memory, i don't believe him. Some of the characters are described to a point that they almost seem caricatures. I couldn't help think of Martin on The Simpsons when reading about Quentin. Roy Lee reminded me of Elvis Presley in one of his cheesy movies. The memoir almost redeemed itself in page 267 (chapter 27), when Sonny finally realizes what has been bugging him all along (here's something i wish i had done: jot down the items on Sonny's list as you read along). That discovery makes the book worthwhile. However, the memoir ends with the Christmas Pageant, and that image really ruined the moment for me.
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