The book has a stunning cover and it captures the story line just as exquisitely as the book's title. This is a true story about a young man's harrowing tale of institutional abuse in a supposedly reform school and his subsequent survival of that ordeal.
Jack Whalen was sentenced to prison time at the Whitbourne Boy’s School in St. John’s Newfoundland. The abuse meted out not only to Jack but all the boys is difficult to read.
The biggest victims were the kids with nobody coming to visit them.
They chose victims whose parents couldn't afford the drive to Whitbourne to check on them. They were after the boys who suffered from mental illness or physical disability. Boys were often transferred from Mount Cashel to Whitbourne, and the boys who'd been in Mount Cashel talked among themselves about the abuses in both institutions.
Of course, those boys who proved to be vulnerable, whose families were not held in high esteem by the Church or in the city, those without political clout or even a watchful eye at home, were often the victims of sexual assault.
Jack's father died when he was only three and Alice, his mother, had five kids at the time of her husband's death. She would go on to have a total of eight kids but she was basically a single mom raising these children. Needless to say, her boys were rambunctious and mischievous.
Jack and his brothers engaged in reckless adventures including sending a bakery truck crashing into a tree and a forklift truck careening into the harbour. Jack had a bit of a swagger and an attitude and often shoplift for fun or in an attempt to bring something home as a contribution. Regardless of these skirmishes, there is no decency in subjecting Jack and others to the horrendous fate which they encountered at Whitbourne.
This true account story is co-written and attempts to showcase Jack's horrors at Whitbourne and his struggles to have the statute of limitations removed from sexual, child abuse cases. I was happy to see that Jack was able to see this materialize when everything seems grim with the slow moving court system and procedures and his cancer diagnosis.
The shining star is this story is Glennis, his very supportive and loving wife, who helped Jack to forge away from the invisible prisons which haunt him. It is unfathomable why no one investigated the "why" for the many boys and especially Jack who attempted to run away (24 times out of the over 100 instances of attempted escape by the boys) from the hell into which they were sent. Even more appalling is the greed and cruelty of the guards who were more concerned about their overtime pay while they keep Jack in isolation for months on end.
People came back up from the cells very quiet. They sat at the table and never said nothing. It took them a while to get used to being back up again. They'd come up and their eyes were blank and they were stiff, and they didn't make small talk.
Jack recounted the terrors at Whitbourne and his treacherous attempted escapes trying to ward off dogs, burly cops, helicopters, and frigid temperature. He was often brought back to solitary confinement time and time again. Reform schools/prisons where the life of a child is forever altered should be held accountable. There needs to be justice for all victims of such institutions and not subject to the statute of limitation.