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Black-Eyed Suzie
 
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Black-Eyed Suzie [Hardcover]

Susan Shaw (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)


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Paperback $9.95  

Book Description

March 2002
"I live in a box with four sides, tall and brown. I cannot get out."
With these words, readers enter the world of Suzie, a dark-eyed twelve-year-old who desperately needs to feel safe and worthy of love. Suzie's "box" is a psychological prison. In it, she sits with arms wrapped around her legs, feet on the cushion of a gold living room chair, knees pressed against her chin. She can no longer eat, sleep, speak, or walk. Although she doesn't know it, living in a box threatens her life. Suzie's mother, a singer who feels she sacrificed her career in order to raise a family, insists that Suzie is just "going through a stage." Suzie's father is rarely home. Only Suzie's older sister Deanna makes an effort to understand what's happening, but even Deanna can't help. Life begins to change when Suzie's Uncle Elliot stops by unexpectedly. Realizing at once that Suzie is in serious trouble, Elliot demands that she be taken to a hospital.

Suzie suddenly finds herself in St. Dorothy's, a mental hospital where she begins a long and fear-filled journey. Here, she meets an understanding therapist named Stella and a boy named Joshua, who offers his friendship while struggling with a tragedy of his own. However, Suzie also meets Karen, a patient on the ward who both terrorizes and challenges her. To make sense of her world, Suzie must piece together a puzzle that involved seemingly unrelated clues - a broken bicycle, a torn picture, peacock feathers, ducks swimming in a pond on the hospital ground, a batch of burned cookies. When the pieces finally come together, they reveal a secret that will change Suzie's life forever. However, they also give her a chance to regain her voice and reclaim her spirit.
--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 6-9-Twelve-year-old Suzie has completely lost touch with reality. She is unable to eat, talk, sleep, or walk and sits in a cramped fetal position and cries. Her mother is infuriated by this "stage" she's in; her father is concerned but distant. It is only when Suzie's uncle forces the family to acknowledge that something is wrong and she is hospitalized that the child can begin to heal. The book is narrated by the inner voice of a character who can't speak because she simply "doesn't have any words," and she is the only character who is fully developed. Details of the abuse that caused Suzie's breakdown slowly emerge, but when the girl is confronted with the danger her older sister is in, she heroically responds. Once the truth is revealed, Suzie's recovery is unrealistically quick, but this is a riveting story that could well serve to help other children deal with a difficult family situation.
Susan Oliver, Tampa-Hillsborough Public Library System, FL
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Gr. 7-9. Mental illness is movingly portrayed in this first novel. Twelve-year-old Suzie has become nearly catatonic; she cannot eat, sleep, or talk, but spends her days hunched in a chair. Only in this position does she feel safe from her mother's wrath. A concerned uncle sees her in this state and gets her into a mental hospital, where, with the help of empathetic caregivers and an excellent therapist, she finds the courage to talk about her mother's physical abuse. Short, diarylike episodes immerse the reader in Suzie's worlds, both her real world of physical and verbal abuse and the seductive, cocoonlike fantasy world she embraces to escape her mother. Suzie's recovery seems a bit quick, and remarkably without any setbacks or regression; but Shaw's depiction of the intricate family dynamics that support an abusive situation is both realistic and sympathetic. Debbie Carton
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 12 and up
  • Hardcover: 176 pages
  • Publisher: Boyds Mills Press (March 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 156397729X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1563977299
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.8 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,138,167 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

13 Reviews
5 star:
 (9)
4 star:
 (4)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars 100% Realistic, January 29, 2003
By 
This review is from: Black-Eyed Suzie (Hardcover)
Suzie is in a safe-box, in her most comfortable position, the fetal position. She won't talk, eat, walk or anything. Her mother is so mad yet won't get her any help. She refuses to acknowledge anything being the matter with her daughter. Suzie's older sister tries to help but she isn't much help at all. Uncle Elliot stops by and forces the family to take action. He forces them to take Suzie to the hospital. In that hospital, a history of abuse starts to take shape and everyone starts to learn of Suzie's past and what is going on in her life. Only then, can they start to heal.

This book is a very easy read. I would recommend this to 7th grade and above. It will get the attention of everyone reading it from the first page to the last. It is very hard to put down; you always want to know what happens to Suzie that has put her in this state of mentality.

Gripping!! You become attached to Suzie and can't help but live her past through her eyes as everything takes shape. You will definitely want some tissues for this book!

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A "should-read" for parents as well as for their children, March 25, 2002
This review is from: Black-Eyed Suzie (Hardcover)
Adolescence ... a time of life that's emotionally-fraught in the best of circumstances. Shaw's book steps beyond the "normal" crisis of youthful self-discovery in offering us a grippingly intense profile of a woman-child, Suzie, whose abusive context resulted in her disassociation with reality, ... the state in which we first meet her. Fortunately, the girl survives in the end: scarred perhaps forever, but finally able to acknowledge her past, and to cope with her present and ~ hopefully ~ her future, as well.
This book could easily be read by Amazon's recommended 9-12 year olds, though I personally suggest it for a 12+ readership. It all depends upon a younger child's maturity.
I also feel that parents of youngsters, in reading this, could benefit from it in reliving just a little of their own adolescent trauma. And, too, I suggest that men and women desiring to have children ought to read this book, in order to realize that bearing children is not a "right", but rather a "responsibility". The father of the family is ineffectual. Suzie's mother "bears" a fetus, but cannot "bear" the child. Having been "born" by her parents, the older Suzie cannot be "borne" by them.
As said above, the author ends the tale in a believably "okay!" scenario. Still, it leaves me wondering how often such true-life stories end semi-happily, with children such as Suzie somewhat intact and functional and protected. How many in truth would have had the intervention she had? How many would have some place to go, later? It's a troublesome question ...
Shaw's book is a disturbingly realistic glimpse into the darker side of youthful identity and parental responsibilities. Its characters jump out from the pages, alive, as ambiguously complex as we ourselves are. This book will likely make you cry at times, but it exudes a hopefulness of "sanity" throughout. Read it and see.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A "should-read" for parents or would-be parents ..., March 24, 2002
This review is from: Black-Eyed Suzie (Hardcover)
Adolescence ... a time of life emotionally-fraught in the best of circumstances. Shaw's book steps beyond the "normal" crisis of youthful self-discovery in offering us a grippingly intense profile of a woman-child, Suzie, whose abusive context resulted in her disassociation with reality, ... the state in which we first meet her. Fortunately, the girl survives in the end: scarred perhaps forever, but finally able to acknowledge her past, and to cope with her present and ~ hopefully ~ her future, as well.

This book could easily be read by Amazon's recommended 9-12 year olds, though I personally suggest it for a 12+ readership. It all depends upon a younger child's maturity, and possible experience of "abuse" somewhere, even if only from a fellow student.

I also feel that parents of youngsters, in reading this, could benefit from it in reliving just a little of their own adolescent trauma. And, too, I suggest that men and women desiring to have children ought to read this book, in order to realize that bearing children is not a "right", but rather a "responsibility". Suzie's mother "bears" a fetus, but cannot "bear" the child. Later, having been "born" by her parents, the older Suzie cannot be "borne" by them.

As said above, the author ends the tale in a believably "okay!" scenario. Still, it leaves me wondering how often such non-fictional stories end so semi-happily, with children such as Suzie somewhat intact and functional and protected. How many in truth would have had the intervention she had? How many would have some place to go, later? It's a troublesome question ...

Shaw's book is a disturbingly realistic glimpse into the darker side of youthful identity and parental responsibilities. Its characters jump out from the pages, alive, to be embraced or hissed at by the reader. Still, as the story progresses, it offers no easy answers: its likeable characters stay likeable, but most of the rest remain rather ambiguously neither wholly "good" nor "bad", as in reality.... As in OUR reality.

This book will likely make you cry at times, but it exudes a hopefulness of "sanity" throughout. Read it and see.

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