Honest and sympathetic look at an adolescent coping with deafness.
I've read books by the author before, and was surprised to find out he has a hearing impairment through reading this. It's not something, as is evidenced in the story, you spot easily, and also as we see in the book - is very easy to forget about, leaving those affected left out and frustrated.
Foster gives us Sophie, enjoying her secondary school life in a band, with friends and song-writing and her guitar. They are even in a Battle of the Bands! She's had some problems with her hearing for a while, but one day her world changes completely when she awakens to a silent world. She can't hear a thing.
The book looks at not only how a young person deals with this, the hearing loss, and as an adolescent with their own school/romantic/friend issues, but also how other people react and help (or otherwise).
You can tell that the author has drawn on personal experience or researched well, the descriptions of what a quiet world is like, how crisps 'feel' in your mouth with a crunching sound, what words are missed from sentences spoken, how relationships are affected... it's very well done.
I loved the friends and family here, Sophie has a typical 'annoying big brother' who may just come through for her, she has wonderfully supportive parents who don't overdo the role as protective/uncaring/comic - they are regular parents doing their best for their daughter in her upsetting new situation. Sophie has a fab best friend too, who shows just what friends can be to each other.
And the music side of the story is great, Sophie channelling her fears and thoughts into song lyrics, and floundering at first with her love for music torn to shreds - can she recover this into a new form?
Fantastic for gaining understanding of hearing impairment, and a very well-composed account of teenage friendship, love of music and bravery in the face of adversity.
With thanks to Netgalley for providing an advance reading copy.