Elena’s older sister, Dora, falls into a depression that she can’t climb out of on her own. She’s hospitalized after she tries to kill herself, and has to endure a nearly month-long stay in the mental illness ward at Lorning while her psychiatrist tries to find the right drug cocktail to stabilize her. While Dora is in the hospital, Elena makes a new friend – Jimmy Zenk – who has some personal experience with Lorning and warns her that it may not be the best place for her sister if they actually want her to recover from her illness. When Dora returns home, she’s different from the girl who went into treatment – more reckless, perhaps, skinnier, not really improved (as far as Elena can tell). And everyone’s attention is hyper-focused on her – is she eating, taking her pills, doing ok in school, feeling ok? Elena feels more and more responsible for Dora, willingly takes on the role of “sister’s keeper” because her parents won’t listen to her, and Dora’s started lying about everything. It all becomes way too much for Elena to handle on her own, and she feels terribly responsible when Dora makes another suicide attempt and has to be re-hospitalized.
Black Box explores that delicate balance between trust, secrets, and doing the right thing – whatever that is – as Elena has to make all of the hard choices about how best to help her sister. There’s some analysis of Dora’s depression, but it’s almost as mysterious to her as it is to everyone else. She can’t even find the words to describe what it feels like. But that just makes it more frightening. Elena’s strength is admirable, and her sadness over her failure to save Dora is real and heart-breaking. This short, gripping novel will leave readers wanting to know more about depression and its treatment.