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Small Silent Things

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"Robin Page balances the quiet exterior with her characters' public selves and the quiet, intense rage that burns alongside the trauma that they carry. For this, the novel's title and the pages that follow are a promise fulfilled. Page announces her debut as a confident voice with much depth both within her lines and in the pockets of space between them, breathing life into her protagonists and delivering on what may inspire many discussions on the places and people we hide to when we want to forget." — Morgan Jerkins, New York Times bestselling author of This Will Be My Undoing

A lyrical, haunting debut that explores the power of parenthood, identity, lust, and the legacy of trauma, as the lives of two neighbors are upended by ghosts from their past lives.
When the news of her mother's death reaches Jocelyn Morrow, it stirs up memories of her traumatic childhood. She is a mother herself now, to six-year-old Lucy; living a life of privilege in Southern California with her husband Conrad; moving in a world of wealthy white women, even though she is not white; as far away from her past as she can get. Her designer clothes cover a net of scars across her back, and she hides an even deeper mark—a fundamental stain, something she believes invited her abuse. She also has a blossoming secret: she is becoming obsessed with Kate, her tennis coach.

Her neighbor Simon Bonaventure is a successful landscape architect and a Rwandan refugee. He too is haunted, by the wife and daughter who were taken from him in the genocide twenty years ago. The ghosts of those he could not save, and those who took them, are never far, and now he has received a letter—allegedly from his daughter, grown, and full of questions for a father she doesn't know.

As Jocelyn and Simon begin a tentative friendship, they forge a bond out of their dark secret histories—a bond that may be their only hope of being pulled back from the abyss.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 3, 2019
      Page’s moving debut explores how tragedy forces surprising changes for a woman who feels out of place in her privileged life. When Jocelyn Morrow’s mother dies, a flood of pent-up emotions and memories of her physically and emotionally abusive childhood are released. Slowly, the dark emotions bleed into her daily life, as she feels increasingly detached from her six-year-old daughter, Lucy. Meanwhile, Jocelyn becomes attracted to her tennis instructor, Kate, and she notices feelings of sexual energy she hasn’t experienced in years. Concerned by Jocelyn’s melancholy, her husband asks her to start therapy. As she dredges up painful memories, she questions herself as a mother and frets over Lucy’s future; Lucy, like Jocelyn, is biracial, and Jocelyn fears Lucy will face many of the same challenges she did. Jocelyn also begins speaking with neighbor Simon, an architect and refugee of the Rwandan genocide who is tormented by the loss of his family. When Simon receives a letter from someone claiming to be his daughter, he must decide how to respond. As Jocelyn’s marriage slowly deteriorates, she forms a bond with Simon that helps her regain a sense of hope. Though several threads of the story feel incomplete, the climactic final scene makes for a dramatic finish. The plot is frustratingly circuitous, but Jocelyn’s electric voice and heartrending battle with depression make this a profound and pleasing character study.

    • Booklist

      August 1, 2019
      Page's touching debut novel moves between two characters in a wealthy Southern California town, both haunted by the past and acting out their confusion in increasingly baffling ways. Jocelyn, married to patient Conrad and mother to six-year-old Lucy, goes into a tailspin after the death of her estranged alcoholic mother, Gladys. Despite intensive therapy, Jocelyn is unable to stop feeling her abusive, poverty-stricken past seeping into her privileged present and compensates by throwing herself into a torrid, doomed relationship with her tennis coach, Kate. Meanwhile, her neighbor, Simon, an architect whose wife died and daughter disappeared during the genocide in Rwanda two decades earlier, attempts to relieve his loneliness and forge the semblance of a family by befriending young Lucy. Because Jocelyn and Simon are both emotionally stuck, their actions tend towards the repetitive, to the point where readers may begin to lose patience with them. But Page explores with insight and compassion the enormous impact of past trauma on present behavior, and the dual perspective prevents the novel from feeling claustrophobic.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

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