![]() ![]() The fourth element consists of other news articles or clippings from places beyond Whistle Stop. The majority take place in Whistle Stop, but many also occur in Birmingham, or anywhere else main characters happen to go. Once we as readers, like Evelyn Couch, have gotten interested in Ninny’s stories, then we start to have scenes which take place in the past with the characters she mentions. The bulletins run between June 12th, 1929 and June 25th, 1969 and appear in the novel in chronological order. This newsletter, written by postmistress Dot Weems, appears in chronological order and is very short. The second major element is The Weems Weekly. When the novel was first published, these scenes would have been roughly contemporary – it’s now historical fiction. At first she just wishes the old lady would shut up so she can eat her candy bars in peace, but then she gets interested in the stories and they forge an unlikely friendship. She accompanies her husband on visits to his mother’s nursing home every Sunday, but can’t stand to sit and watch TV, so she finds herself in the visitor’s room with Ninny Threadgoode. Evelyn Couch is struggling with her weight, her marriage, menopause, and an inevitable feeling of doom. The story is told through four different elements. There are two main threads to the storyline, which covers events in the fictional town of Whistle Stop, Alabama (just outside of Birmingham) between the early 1920s and the late 1980s. This is going to be a complicated review. NOTE: Although the reading level is low, this is an adult novel. My edition McGraw-Hill, New York, 1988.Īdult fiction, 403 pages including recipes. Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe by Fannie Flagg. ![]()
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