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Goodnight Mister Tom

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Goodnight Mister Tom
First edition cover
AuthorMichelle Magorian
Illustratoranaa kcamow
Cover artistAngelo Renaldi
LanguageEnglish
GenreHistorical novel
PublisherKestrel Books
Publication date
1981
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Media typePrint (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages304 pp (first edition, hardback)
ISBN0722657013
OCLC9987640

Goodnight Mister Tom (also Good Night, Mr Tom) is a 1981 novel by Michelle Magorian. It follows a young boy, William Beech, who is evacuated from London during the Blitz of World War II, and put into the care of Tom Oakley, an elderly recluse. Thanks to Tom, William Beech is able to experience a new life of loving and care.

Two musicals based on the book have been written and a film has been made. There is also a new play of Goodnight Mister Tom, adapted for the stage by national children's dramatist David Wood, opening in early 2011.

Summary

As Britain stands on the brink of the Second World War, many young children are sent into the countryside to escape the German bombardment. William "Willie" Beech is one of these children. An unhappy, deprived child, he finds kindness and love in the home of Mr Thomas Oakley, who lives in the village of Little Weirwold. The book is set between September 1939 and the spring of 1941.

The protagonist, William, is a child who is physically and emotionally abused by his violent & religious mother. He arrives at Tom's house, thinly clad, underfed and covered with painful bruises, and believing he is full of sin, a result of his upbringing by his mother who inflicts severe punishments and uses excuses such as "If you do such a thing, you will go to hell" and "That is a sin."

However, Mr Tom, as William calls him, does not punish William as his mother had. Tom shows him an understanding he has not previously experienced. Although William wets the bed for some time after moving into the house, Tom merely helps him change the bedding without complaint. Having seen William's bruises, and realising that William comes from an abusive home, Tom helps the boy through many challenges and gives him a healthy, happy home. Willie is addressed as "William" by Tom and "Will" by his friends. William Beech is improving and progressing a lot with the help and comfort of Mr Tom.

William begins to trust Tom and the world around him. When William goes to school he is astonished that the children and teachers support and care for him. He forms a small circle of friends among a few of his classmates: Zach, George, Carrie, and Ginnie. He is also fond of one of his teachers Annie Hartridge.

As William is changed by Tom, so is Tom transformed by William's presence in his home. It is revealed that Mr. Tom lost Rachel, his wife, and child to Scarletina 40 years earlier, and he has become reclusive because of it. The villagers avoid him because of his apparent coldness, however, when William arrives, Mr. Tom immediately demonstrates his kind nature by acquiring good, warm clothing and nourishing food, specially cooked breakfasts and tea. He helps to educate William by reading him Bible passages and teaching him to write. Finally Tom overcomes a major personal barrier by entering an art store, something he had previously found difficult as Rachel had been a painter. William becomes proficient in drawing and dramatics in the village.

The growing bond between the two is upset when William's mother requests that the boy return to her in the city, telling him she is sick. At first, William thinks this will be a good thing, so he can be helpful to his mother. However his mother is not pleased to learn the details of his time with Tom. While William has been away, she has become pregnant and had a baby, to whom she has been immensely cruel. After a bad reunion she throws William against a bookcase, purposely knocking him out, then ties, gags him, and locks him, with the baby, in a cupboard under the stairs.

Tom has a premonition that something is not right with William. Although he has never travelled beyond his immediate locality, he ventures into London and, with luck, locates William's neighbourhood and then his home. No-one answers the door when he knocks, but he persuades the local policeman to break down the door.

There he finds William locked in the closet, holding a small, still bundle: a dead baby girl named Trudy. An empty bottle is at his feet. William is malnourished and badly bruised, as he had been locked under the stairs for several weeks after a savage beating. He blames himself for the baby's death and can hardly speak. William is shocked to learn that a woman cannot conceive on her own, so his mother was having a relationship with another man (she had previously taught him that such relationships are sin). It is later discovered that she has committed suicide.

William goes to the hospital, where he is treated awfully and experiences terrible nightmares. The nurse then comes round and drugs him so he'll fall asleep and stop screaming, though he'll wake up a few hours later and the process will be repeated. Tom 'kidnaps' William from the hospital and takes him back to Little Weirworld. However, Tom is traced by the authorities, who have come to offer William a place in a children's home after the death of his mother and in the absence of any other relatives. Luckily the authorities realise that William has already found a good home and allow Tom to adopt him.

Soon afterwards, Tom, William and Zach enjoy a holiday at Salmouth, a small seaside village. They have such a good time and Zach renames the village Salt-on-the-Mouth.

Zach's father is injured by a German bomb and he hurries home on the next train saying farewell to all his friends.

William later learns that Zach has been killed and is grief-stricken for some time. Carrie, Ginnie, and George are also extremely upset. Eventually, through learning to ride Zach's bike, William realises that Zach lives on inside him.