Synopses & Reviews
Review
"Ray...creates realistically sympathetic characters, whose anxieties and disappointments are palpable."
Review
"The exploration of Gussie's feelings toward her parents and the hearing world...is heartfelt."
Review
"An honest...humorous look at a complicated time...[the] characters...will stay with the reader for a long time." Bookpage
"Ray...creates realistically sympathetic characters, whose anxieties and disappointments are palpable." Kirkus Reviews
"The exploration of Gussie's feelings toward her parents and the hearing world...is heartfelt." School Library Journal
"While the portrayal of a signing household is natural and convincing, the focus is on Gussie's rebellion and growth." Horn Book Guide, Pointer
Synopsis
As one of three hearing daughters of deaf parents, 12-year-old Gussie Davis is expected to be a proper representative of Saint Judes Church for the Deaf in Birmingham, Alabama, which is run by her father. So when Gussie starts to hum through signed services in the summer of 1948, Reverend Davis assumes she merely wants to sing out loud and sends her to a regular church downtown. But Gussies behavior worsens, and she is not allowed to go on a much-anticipated trip; instead, she must help her father at the Alabama School for the Deaf.
Rebelling against the strict rules of the school, Gussie finally confronts the difficulties and prejudices encountered by the deaf community, all while still trying to find her own identity in the worlds of both the hearing and the deaf.
Drawing on firsthand accounts of her mothers own childhood with deaf parents, Delia Ray provides an inside look at the South in the 1940s. Lively humor, unforgettable characters, and meticulous research combine to make this a standout novel that offers keen insight into what it means to be hearing in a deaf world. Authors note.
About the Author
Delia Ray's novel GHOST GIRL: A BLUE RIDGE MOUNTAIN STORY has been nominated on state lists in Oklahoma, Kansas, South Carolina, Missouri, Indiana, and New Hampshire. Ms. Ray is also the author of three young-adult nonfiction books about American history. Her latest novel, SINGING HANDS, is based on her mother's experiences growing up as a hearing child with deaf parents. Ms. Ray lives with her family in Iowa City, Iowa.