cover image Safe

Safe

Susan Shaw, . . Dutton, $16.99 (176pp) ISBN 978-0-525-47829-4

In this extraordinarily tender novel, Shaw (The Boy from the Basement ) eloquently encapsulates what it feels like to be a victim of rape. On the last day of seventh grade, Tracy is brutally assaulted by an older boy she knows. From that day on, even after her attacker is arrested and pleads guilty, she has trouble believing she is safe. Worse, she can no longer find any comfort in her memories of her mother, who died when Tracy was only three. “I couldn’t even think of Mama and the yellow rose and the yellow dress or the way her stories felt.... How could I fix the shattered piece?” Feeling unprotected, disconnected from her once-happy childhood and alone, Tracy stays indoors for almost the entire summer, unable to face unknown horrors. Going to a therapist doesn’t help, although she does find some relief when she practices the piano. Soon music becomes the center of her days, distracting her from scary thoughts but also further isolating her from friends. Intimate, first-person narrative honestly expresses Tracy’s full range of emotions as well as her state of paralysis, unable to think about her attack or move past it. The author adroitly avoids spelling out the particulars of the rape, conveying its impact through Tracy’s conscious or subconscious choice to try to blank out the details. Readers may find themselves so engrossed in Tracy’s trauma that they might have trouble putting the book down until Tracy finally comes to terms with her experiences. Ages 14-up. (Oct.)