By Rachel Simon
‘The Story of Beautiful
Girl’ by Rachel Simon came to my attention as a recommendation from a family
member, who I might add, also enjoys books as much as I do. When I received the
recommendation I went to one of my favorite links, www.goodreads.com ,
and checked out the story description. Just because someone recommends that I
read a book does not mean it’s going to jump straight into my hot little hands or
to the top of my ‘To Be Read’ list.
However that did not happen, as the
moment I read the description I wanted to read the book. Being a supporter of
my local library, well let’s be honest they support my reading habit; I jumped
to their website and requested the book! I recall having to wait for the book
as all the copies in my area had been checked out. (This book was read early
January of 2012, in my 100 book reading challenge.) With all the copies checked
out, I thought people must be enjoying it. Ok, so I don’t know if they were
enjoying it but they were definitely reading it.
Once
I got my anxious hands on the book I did not merely jump in, I dove in! Rachel
Simon is not just an imaginary writer; she takes words and weaves them with
such artistic talent that it makes her novel turn into a brightly woven
tapestry. Picking up her book was more like reading a work of art than a novel.
Her skillfulness at capturing a time in history was as if she were bottling
magic and using it as fuel to take the reader back to 1968. A time where things
were changing but not at a fast enough rate that our four leads to be caught in
appalling old stigmas and prejudices. A time where if you had a mental illness
or if you were a deaf black male you would have been locked away in an asylum
for the feeble minded. During the days when the asylums and institutions gave
no voice to those they housed. Often times those residents were victims of
trauma far worse than what you or I could imagine being put through with those
committing the crime getting away with it. The right of the patient was decades
away…along with many other rights.
Lynnie,
a young white woman with a developmental disability that causes her to be mute,
escapes the home for the Feeble Minded that she had been housed in since she
was a young girl. On the night she escapes she leaves with Homer, a black deaf
male, whom Lynnie had befriended while there. Mute and deaf they defy the odds
and show that communication can be done on a more instinctual basic level than
most would think possible. Love does not require spoken words for the two of
them to understand each other. The same night they escape Lynnie had given
birth to an infant girl that the staff of the home did not know she was
carrying. The three of them make it as far as a local farm, where they find
refuge from the owner Martha, a retired schoolteacher and widow. Realizing that
Lynnie and Homer have escaped, the police track them to Martha’s farm. Lynnie
hides the baby in Martha's attic before the authorities are able to discover
the infant. As Lynnie is put into the police cruiser to return to the home, she
whispers to Martha, “Hide her.” Homer managed to blend into the night and
escape arrest, with an internal vow to get back to Beautiful Girl and her baby.
Over the course of the novel you are taken on the forty year journey that
weaves these four lives together.
I
recommend that not only should you read this wonderful story, but when doing so
I highly encourage you to have a box of tissues or a towel ready, as it will
definitely pull on your heart strings. Growing up in a house where my mother
was white and my father was black, I thought I knew a lot about the struggles
of the Civil Rights Movement. Rachel Simon’s novel brought new things to light
for me, especially when it came to mental illness as well as race relations. An
example from the book of such a lesson was the fact that American Sign Language
was not taught to people of color, in the early days of its inception. So the
simple sign for Apple would be one thing to a deaf white person and another for
a deaf black person. It really shows how from 1968 to 2013 we've come further
along in the Civil Rights Movement as well as Patient Care for the mentally
ill. I’m sure we still have a way to go, as nothing is ever prefect but this
story highlights the struggles that they endure and overcome.
I
gave “The Story of Beautiful Girl” 5 out of 5 stars. Not only will this be a
must read again but one that I will own. If I lived near everyone that I push
books at, this would totally be one I’d be pushing straight into your hands.
Buy it, check it out from the library, and in general somehow get your hands on
a copy of this book! Your mind, soul, and heart will thank you for the journey.
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