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From Horn Book
Speaking out at the "wrong" time-calling 911 from a teen drinking-party
has made Melinda a social outcast; now she barely speaks at all. A conversation
with her father about their failed Thanksgiving dinner goes as follows:
"Dad: 'It's supposed to be soup.' / Me: / Dad: 'It tasted a bit
watery, so I kept adding thickener....'/ Me: ." While Melinda's
smart and savvy interior narrative slowly reveals the searing pain of
that 911 night, it also nails the high-school experience cold-from "The
First Ten Lies They Tell You" (number eight: "Your schedule
was created with your needs in mind") to cliques and clans and
the worst and best in teachers. The book is structurally divided into
four marking periods, over which Melinda's grades decline severely and
she loses the only friend she has left, a perky new girl she doesn't
even like. Melinda's nightmare discloses itself in bits throughout the
story: a frightening encounter at school ("I see IT in the hallway....IT
sees me. IT smiles and winks"), an artwork that speaks pain. Melinda
aches to tell her story, and well after readers have deduced the sexual
assault, we feel her choking on her untold secret. By springtime, while
Melinda studies germination in Biology and Hawthorne's symbolism in
English, and seeds are becoming "restless" underground, her
nightmare pushes itself inexorably to the surface. When her ex-best-friend
starts dating the "Beast," Melinda can no longer remain silent.
A physical confrontation with her attacker is dramatically charged and
not entirely in keeping with the tone of the rest of the novel, but
is satisfying nonetheless, as Melinda wields a shard of broken glass
and finds her voice at last to scream, "No!" Melinda's distinctive
narrative employs imagery that is as unexpected as it is acute: "April
is humid....A warm, moldy washcloth of a month." Though her character
is her own and not entirely mute like the protagonist of John Marsden's
So Much to Tell You, readers familiar with both books will be impelled
to compare the two girls made silent by a tragic incident. The final
words of Marsden's books are echoed in those of Speak, as Melinda prepares
to share her experience with a father-figure art teacher: "Me:
'Let me tell you about it.'" An uncannily funny book even as it
plumbs the darkness, Speak will hold readers from first word to last.
-- Copyright © 1999 The Horn Book, Inc. All rights reserved.
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