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The Night Child

A Novel

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Exquisitely nuanced and profoundly intimate, The Night Child is a story of resilience, hope, and the capacity of the mind, body, and spirit to save itself despite all odds.

Nora Brown teaches high school English and lives a quiet life in Seattle with her husband and six-year-old daughter. But one November day, moments after dismissing her class, a girl's face appears above the students' desks—"a wild numinous face with startling blue eyes, a face floating on top of shapeless drapes of purples and blues where arms and legs should have been. Terror rushes through Nora's body—the kind of raw terror you feel when there's no way out, when every cell in your body, your entire body, is on fire—when you think you might die."

Twenty-four hours later, while on Thanksgiving vacation, the face appears again. Shaken and unsteady, Nora meets with neurologists and eventually, a psychiatrist. As the story progresses, a terrible secret is discovered—a secret that pushes Nora toward an even deeper psychological breakdown.

This breathtaking debut novel examines the impact of traumatic childhood experiences and the fragile line between past and present.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 26, 2018
      Nora, the troubled protagonist of Quinn’s debut novel, poses several unusual problems for narrator Campbell, not the least of which is finding voices for a character with two personalities. Nora, married with a six-year-old daughter, is teaching high school in Seattle at the close of the 20th century when long-suppressed memories of childhood trauma begin to return. They’re preceded by the image of a girl’s luminous face floating before her. It belongs to Margaret, a dissociative identity of Nora’s, and it takes her back to her horrific childhood with a brutal, alcoholic mother and a father who was even worse. These memory trips lead to a breakdown and hospitalization. Actress Campbell introduces Nora with a self-confident voice, though one almost too soft for a teacher. Later, in the hospital, her normal speech gives way to a druggy dreaminess mixed with the childish natter of her Margaret personality. Her visitors include a dry, unemotional husband who informs her he’s leaving for another woman; a slightly officious nurse; the kind, gentle-spoken principal of her school; and her concerned but oddly confrontational psychiatrist. Together Quinn and Campbell present a vivid depiction of the soul-numbing ordeal of mental illness. A Blackstone hardcover.

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  • English

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