Showing posts with label Ohio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ohio. Show all posts

Friday, December 23, 2022

True Biz by Sara Novic

December 22, 2022

True Biz by Sara Novic

True biz: American Sign Language expression that means really, seriously, honest truth

At the River Valley School for the Deaf, the students are just like kids everywhere: they want to pass their courses, go to parties, and hook up with one another. They also wish their parents, school administrators, and politicians would stop telling them what is the right thing for them. Especially the ones who are not deaf. Charlie is a transfer student with an unsuccessful cochlear implant. Her beauty pageant mother is desperate for her to be "normal" at any cost and pushed for the implant, not allowing Charlie to learn sign language. Austin is another student at the school, from a family with a genetic history of deafness and intermarrying with other deaf people. His world is turned upside down when his sister is born hearing. Eliot is Austin's roommate, whose mother resorted to faith healing to heal his deafness with disastrous results. When the school principal learns that local officials want to close the school and integrate the students into the public school system, she struggles to save the school, the students and her marriage.

There is so much here: coming of age, the deaf community and culture, family wanting to do what they think is best, use of sparse resources for the needs of a small percentage of the population. There is also the history of the deaf community, including standard American Sign Language versus Black American Sign Language (as well as sign language in other countries), plus the many problems with cochlear implants which are well-known to the manufacturers but hidden from the deaf community. Book clubs could spend hours or even multiple sessions talking about these topics.

As a hearing person, I never realized there was so much controversy within the deaf community. I know one person with a cochlear implant and another who was approved for an implant but opted not to get it. The person who did get the implant said it helped in some situations but certainly didn't give them great hearing. Not sure whether they regret getting the implant or not.

A really interesting read, highly recommended.

Cochlear implant

Wednesday, January 8, 2020

The Last Place You Look by Kristen Lepionka


January 8, 2020

The Last Place You Look by Kristen Lepionka

Fifteen years ago, Sarah Cook disappeared on the same night that her parents were brutally murdered.  Her boyfriend at the time was quickly arrested and convicted of the crime, and has been on Death Row ever since.  Now a date has been set for his execution.  His sister, convinced of his innocence, wants to make one last attempt to find Sarah, believing that she holds the answers to what happened on that long ago night.  Believing she has seen Sarah in the area, she hires private investigator Roxane Weary to try to locate the woman that she is sure is the missing Sarah.  Roxane takes on the case, needing the money, but already pretty convinced that the police got the right guy, although she soon realizes that there is more to the story.  But Roxane has troubles of her own, dealing with her father’s death in the only way she knows how, by looking at the world through the bottom of a whiskey bottle.


This is quite a decent thriller with a number of plot turns and a flawed detective who lives a messy life.  Roxane herself fits the mold of the noir detective nicely:  she’s always broke, so she takes on cases that she knows she shouldn’t; she has a cool old car; she is attracted to lovers that she knows she should stay the hell away from; she drinks way too much; she hides from her feelings, refusing to deal with the emotional issues looming in her life; she doesn’t take care of herself; she gets stopped by the police frequently since she skitters on the edge of the law in her work.  It’s fast-paced, a quick read, and will keep you turning the pages.