As a digital subscriber, you’ll receive unlimited access to Horn Book web exclusives and extensive archives, as well as access to our highly searchable Guide/Reviews Database.
To access other site content, visit The Horn Book homepage.
To continue you need an active subscription to hbook.com.
Subscribe now to gain immediate access to everything hbook.com has to offer, as well as our highly searchable Guide/Reviews Database, which contains tens of thousands of short, critical reviews of books published in the United States for young people.
Thank you for registering. To have the latest stories delivered to your inbox, select as many free newsletters as you like below.
No thanks. Return to article
(2)
4-6
In this sequel to Show Me a Sign (rev. 9/20), deaf, signing Mary, now fourteen, once again leaves her home on Martha's Vineyard--where being deaf and signing is part of the established culture--for Boston and environs, a world in which deafness is considered monstrous or, at best, pitiable. Mary has taken up a request that she teach language to a seemingly non-lingual, deaf child of an affluent family. When she arrives at their manor, she finds her charge locked away and the household governed by an abusive butler. As Mary experiments with teaching methods, she realizes that her student's condition is quite different than was supposed, and in an audacious act of rescue returns the child to her proper home. Throughout, as in the previous novel, LeZotte sensitively interweaves and illuminates historical, white attitudes toward deaf people, the Wampanoag people, and the Black population, all the while championing Mary's forthright insistence that all be treated with respect. Mary seems set to become a true hero-adventurer, an almost larger-than-life sleuth, teacher, and woman of action; and while the story's subject matter is serious in its engagement with history's ills, LeZotte conveys a sense of real enjoyment in having Mary disrupt (a little anachronistically, perhaps) the prejudices and expectations of the status quo.
Reviewer: Deirdre F. Baker
| Horn Book Magazine Issue:
November, 2021