Monday, 14 July 2025
The Loudness of Unsaid Things, by Hilde Hinton
With a mentally ill mother and a negligent father, Susie is what would today be called an at-risk child. But this is the 1960s and 70s and Susie is left to raise herself. Bright and lonely, we follow her story from the age of 7 to 17 as she tries to find her place in the world with few boundaries and little guidance.
It is interspersed with the account of an older woman, Miss Kaye, who works at The Institute – a facility housing troubled young women.
It becomes clear that Miss Kaye is a mature Susie, using her life experience to shepherd others through their damage.
Hinton has drawn on her own life to paint a devastating picture of the effect mental illness can have on a family.
Susie is a vibrant character, warm and reckless; Miss Kaye lives life on her own terms. We get no details of how the first became the second until the end, after Miss Kaye retires and a surprise visitor shines a few bars of light on intergenerational trauma.
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