Rating: g+ no profanity, no sex, constant threat of kidnapping.
Recommend: deaf culture / history curious, jh and up.
First, this is not a standalone. It’s book 3 of a trilogy for SURE.
Second, there was a … rhythm? Problem. Or something. Something was off in this book. For example, Mary is very anti-religion, her town is very anti-Mary because of it… maybe that’s the first sign that’s it’s part of the bigger story. The level of faith in her town plays in to the beginning of the story in a big way, but it’s not … clear, somehow. So her going off with the missionaries… there should have been more explanation there. She is OPPOSED to their form of faith.
Third, HOW can one girl get kidnapped - or nearly kidnapped - SO MANY TIMES?!?! enough.
I think the author was trying to show how a Deaf person would gather information that is NOT speak or listening. Facial expression, body language, observation. So Miss Mitchell, and Mary not being able to figure her out entirely (and having to escape form her, too?!) is part of that “show me don’t tell me” method. But it just created a hole in the character, I’m not sure what that woman was about, even now.
Also, I think there is a lot of modern sensibility in this novel. 1810, there wasn’t much going on in the way of Deaf rights, Native rights / assimilation protest, women’s rights… and yet it’s all here. Even as she is telling the sort of the early Deaf schools, she is criticizing the mentality of the historical mentality: Deaf people are not “simple” as a side effect of their deafness. And that attitude is portrayed here. Mary does not want to work with anyone who thinks that way, she is very aware of her own abilities and the way the hearing world views her. She wants to fight that thinking, but is unwilling to start at the beginning.
I don’t know. I’m not part of the Deaf community. I read this kind of book to learn. But I also have strong feelings about modern writers putting contemporary sensibilities into a historical fiction story. Was it really like that? To the winner goes the telling of the history, so who knows. But I didn’t love this one.