I stumbled upon this little gem in a dollar bin. The title caught my eye because I grew up in a steel valley just outside of Pittsburgh in the 80's as many of the mills were closing. I saw first hand the devastation the closing of the steel mills had on the local economy. Those old mills sat empty and abandoned, a skeletal reminder of what they were. Later, after I grew up and moved out of state, they were bulldozed, demolished, gone, replaced with new malls, resturants and modern businesses. There remains no physical evidence of the numerous steel mills that made the steel that helped build our country.
However, the mill across the river from us kept the Coke portion of their mill opened. I remember having a love/hate relationship with the mill because it's lights were so beautiful at night, but it was such a scourge on the landscape in the stark daylight. I remember the smog, and the coal dust, the dust that would make my feet so black after playing barefoot in the yard. I remember how frustrated I was after I received a telescope for Christmas and couldn't see the stars! So when I saw this book, "No Star Nights" with it's smoky illustrations, I had to have it.
As a teacher in West Virginia, I have tried to explain to my rural West Virginia students what it was like for me to grow up in Pittsburgh. This book explains beautifully the words I stumbled over and the images I struggled to share. From an educational standpoint, this ties in well with our unit on West Virginia because we discuss what happens to the coal mined in WV, and the author is from West Virginia and the story takes place in Weirton, WV. We discuss how many people left West Virginia to work in other states, like my own great grandparents, and we tie it in with our West Virginia state songs.
This book is a treasure for me to share with my students and my own children and recalls an important piece of history that has many lessons to teach.