John Henry Days
ABOUT
THE BOOK
Immortalised in folk ballads, John Henry has been a favourite American hero since the mid-nineteenth century. According to legend, John Henry, a black labourer for the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad, was a man of superhuman strength and stamina. He proved his mettle in a contest with a steam drill, only to die of exhaustion moments after his triumph.
John Henry Days transforms the simple ballad. The narrative revolves around the story of J. Sutter, a young black journalist. Sutter is a “junketeer”, a freeloading hack, who roams from one publicity event to another, abusing his expense account and mooching as much as possible. It is 1996, and an assignment for a travel Web site takes Sutter to West Virginia for the first annual ‘John Henry Days’ festival, a celebration of a new U.S. postal stamp honouring John Henry. And there the real story of John Henry emerges in graceful counterpoint to Sutter’s thoroughly modern adventure.
As he explores the parallels between the lives of these two black men, and between the Industrial Age, which literally killed John Henry, and the Digital Age, which is destroying J. Sutter’s soul, Whitehead adds multiples dimensions to the myth of the steel-driving man.