Reviews

Nada-Nada Sunyi by Heather Gudenkauf

ridgewaygirl's review against another edition

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1.0

Can I just start out by telling you that this is a terrible book? I'm going to be as nice as I can, but I only finished it because I was reading it with a friend and also I have a problem getting rid of books I haven't entirely read, and I wanted to get this one safely out of the house.

So, the basic plot of the book is that two seven-year-old girls go missing early one morning from their small Iowa town. They are best friends and both live in houses that back onto a large forest. Petra is the only child of a middle-aged professor and his younger wife, who struggled for years to have a baby. Calli is the daughter of an abusive alcoholic father and a negligent, but loving mother who has a lot of issues. Calli has also not spoken since she was four and no one knows why, primarily because no one has tried to find treatment for her, although the school does send her to the guidance counselor a few times a week. The deputy in charge of the investigation had a long relationship with Calli's mother before they both married other people and they have a lot of unresolved feelings for each other.

The story is told in very short chapters, switching between several points of view, making this book quite a bit shorter than its page count indicates. Luckily, the name of the person narrating is put up at the top of each segment in large letters, because the voice never alters. The seven-year-old girl sounds exactly like the middle-aged professor who sounds exactly like the under-educated mother. One of the girls has a third person narration, for no purpose I can fathom. There are several weighty issues dealt with in this book, from spousal abuse to child abuse to selective mutism to kidnapping to assault to alcoholism, but since there is so little room to explore each issue, you don't have to worry about taking any of them seriously and, indeed, the characters themselves don't worry about things too much.

Are you wondering if I liked anything about this book? The cover was nice. I mean, it's a standard illustration, featuring the torso of a young girl facing away from the camera, but the clothes and the age of the girl actually correspond with a character in the book and it's a pretty picture. That was good. There was nothing really objectionable in the book; it didn't espouse satanism or have much in the way of swear words, which is something of an accomplishment considering one of the narrators was a twelve-year-old boy. The crime scene people were very tidy, which is nice because who wants to clean up fingerprint dust, right? They also don't find any clues, which are obvious and left to a parent to find, which means they may not have done the best job, but I really hate dusting and would not want to be having to worry about the parents here having to vacuum while their daughters were missing, so it was considerate of them. I think I, personally, might have wanted hundreds of law enforcement officers marching around my home in muddy boots if one of my children had disappeared, but the characters here seemed fine with the half dozen officers mentioned in this book, wandering around, talking about starting a search tomorrow sometime, so who am I to judge? Also, if the police had done their job, the thrilling climax would have been avoided entirely, and we all know that a thriller-like book needs a thrilling and dangerous climax.

bethtmorris's review against another edition

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1.0

something was missing for me, thought it was okay...curious to discuss at book club!

ris_stitches's review against another edition

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4.0

I really liked it! Great story-telling, and very real perspective of the different characters.

libshitz's review against another edition

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4.0

Couldn't put it down. Read in one day. A real page-turner

suebee135's review against another edition

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5.0

Martin Gregory wakes one morning to find his seven year old daughter, Petra, is missing. Although it appears that Petra left the house on her own accord, her parents are starting to panic. When Deputy Sheriff Louis and Martin question Antonia, the mother of Petra’s best friend Calli, they discover that Calli is missing also. Antonia is convinced that the two girls have just ventured off into the woods that border their property and will be home soon. We know better.
Thirteen years ago, Antonia made the decision to marry Griff Clark instead of “Lou” Louis, the current Deputy Sheriff. That decision resulted in two children- 12 year old Ben and 7 year old Calli. It also resulted in a life of verbal, emotional, and physical abuse for Antonia and her children.
In the early chapters of the book, Calli has been dragged into the woods by her inebriated father in search of her “real” father, Deputy Louis. Of course that’s the liquor talking paired with Griff’s intense jealousy of Antonia and Lou’s past relationship. Calli has been mute since the age of four when she suffered from an as yet unknown trauma and now cannot call out for help. This is not hard to believe with a father like hers. So, we know what is happening to Calli, but what happened to Petra? Is Griff even more of a monster than we thought?
This story is told in the alternating voices of Calli, Martin, Antonia, Ben, and Lou. The story grabs you from the beginning and never lets go. I could NOT put this book down! Crimes against children are never pleasant to read about, but the details are handled very well. I cared so much for these characters, and especially those little girls that I had to find out what happened to them. If you want a story that stays on your mind and characters that make a place in your heart, you should read “The Weight of Silence”.

hmbb99's review against another edition

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4.0

I love how the story is shown from every characters point of view, yet it still leaves the details out which make you want to keep reading. I couldn't put this book down until it was finished. It took you on a journey of sadness, adventure, heartache and wrapped it all up in various forms of love.

meghan111's review against another edition

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3.0

You know who would really like this? People who really liked [b:The Memory Keeper's Daughter|10441|The Memory Keeper's Daughter|Kim Edwards|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1266450174s/10441.jpg|2868431]. This novel is hard to put down once you start reading, in that particular way that makes you need to find out what's going to happen and how everything is going to turn out. Two young girls are missing in a small town, and no one knows what has happened to them - they were both missing from their beds in the morning, with no signs of struggle. The book alternates in point of view - each chapter told by the mothers, the brother, the sheriff, or the girls.

jmsv45's review against another edition

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4.0

Writer Person

Surprisingly enough, I didn't cry during this book. I wanted to yell a lot, though. Because Calli's father just HAD to drag her into the woods right? And Petra just HAD to leave the house at four in the morning. And Deputy Sheriff Louis just HAD to be married to someone else.
Do you see where I'm going with this?
Technically this could have all been nicely avoided.
But then nothing would really have resolved itself and I guess tragedies like this get stuff done. For example, Toni sees just how awful her husband is. Louis sees just how much he loves Tony. Petra's father probably learned not to trust people around his daughter.
It was sad, and awful, and wonderfully written.
One of the interesting things about this book is the shift in POV. It's a shift I personally wanted to explore. Most of it is in first person- Toni, Louis, Petra's father, Petra. Ben told it in second person, as if the reader was Calli. And Calli's side was third person.
I loved it so much. It was powerful in such a subtle way.
I really enjoyed this book. It was sad, don't get me wrong.
Sad, frustrating, heartbreaking...
But really touching. Makes you want to look a little bit deeper into your own life. And also evaluate all of your relationships o.o

machadofam8's review against another edition

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2.0

Very predictable. Ok, not great.

vikingwolf's review against another edition

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3.0

Calli is seven has been mute since a childhood trauma that is never spoken about. So when she and best friend Petra disappear during the night, the families are in a panic and everyone is suddenly a suspect. Police and abduction experts are called in and the families turn on each other as secrets are uncovered.

This was not the type of book that I normally read but it was really gripping. It is a thriller full of human emotion and it gives you an idea of what it must be like to have your child go missing. The story is told through the POV of Calli, the police, and the families, switching between them as the search continues. You can see what is happening to Calli as you follow her journey of terror through the woods with her drunk and violent father but you know that Petra is with someone a lot more dangerous. You scream with frustration each time the scene shifts away just as you are about to discover something vital! This for me is the mark of very good writing!

Good things-gripping plot, good character development, the changing POV, the mix of memories and current events and the back story of the main characters all combine to give a really good tension filled story. It is not just a boring search for missing kids as it has plot twists throughout.

My only niggle is that I guessed very early who had taken Petra and abused her. It did also seem a bit convenient to have the cops shoot Calli's dad so leave her mother free to be with the cop. Just a little too neat for me but it didn't spoil the story in any way.

I recommend this book to anyone who likes a good story.