I was when I started reading Berlie Doherty's 1991 Carnegie Medal winning young adult novel Dear Nobody a bit worried regarding the two distinct points of view Doherty presents because I much too often have found dual voiced fiction problematic and often showing one decent but then one rather lame and textually lacking perspective. But no and thankfully, Berlie Doherty delightfully shows in Dear Nobody two totally wonderful and equally readable, equally emotionally stimulating and thought-provoking narratives, with first-person musings representing the events of Helen's unexpected unwanted pregnancy (and after only making love one time) as her boyfriend Chris recalls them in retrospect, and interspersed with a series of letters from Helen to their unborn and unnamed child, telling her side of the story as she experiences and contemplates it.
With the framing sequence that starts Dear Nobody set in the autumn as Chris is on the verge of leaving his home city of Sheffield for Newcastle University and a parcel of letters being delivered to him, recognising Helen's handwriting, Chris begins to read these epistles (all addressed to "Dear Nobody"). And whilst reading the letters, Christ recalls the past nine months, how Helen's unexpected pregnancy changes everything between them and their relationship, that they do try to make things work, but that ultimately, albeit Helen decides against an abortion and on keeping the baby, she also thinks that she and Chris should break up, leaving Chris feeling discarded and bereft, but that after finishing with the "Dear Nobody" letters, Chris realises that Helen is about to have her baby, rushes to the hospital and gets to meet his newborn daughter, who will be called Amy. And while Dear Nobody does (and realistically) not end up with Chris and Helen getting back together, there is still a bit of hope that perhaps sometime in the future, Helen, Chris and their daughter might perhaps become a family (and that Chris is definitely planning on being present in Amy's life as her father).
Now I have actually not read all that many novels which have teenaged pregnancy as the main theme, but from those that I have read, Dear Nobody has definitely been my favourite. For I do absolutely love and appreciate how neither Chris nor Helen is presented by Berlie Doherty as negative or as blameworthy, but simply as two teenagers who ended up with an unwanted pregnancy (and not to mention that Helen's and Chris' own issues with their respective families are portrayed gracefully and with much understanding all around by Doherty's dual voiced texts, and with the main theme of Dear Nobody being not only Helen and Chris' relationship but also how everything is tied together and that love can be both wonderful and painful, requires understanding and a willingness to accept problematic and uncomfortable scenarios, such as for example and of course unwanted pregnancy and how society reacts to this).
Emotionally intense and beautifully written, and with a wonderful and descriptively lovely and enlightening sense of geographical place is Dear Nobody (and with me not only finding both Helen and Chris relatable and totally kindred spirits but that I also now after having finished with Dear Nobody totally want to visit Sheffield and Newcastle), for me, Dear Nobody is solidly and delightfully five stars and is also one of the best Carnegie Medal winners I have read to date (and indeed, that I do not often give five star ratings).