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White Noise

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Fifteen-year-old Emma is woken up by her dad's nightmares. Again.

On Friday evenings they go running at East Point Reserve to escape. Escape the ripples of grief that still chase them three years after her mum's death; escape Emma's autism diagnosis; escape her dad's work as an emergency room doctor.

At school, Emma has won a spot on the beach volleyball Sports Institute program. The spot that her best friend Summer desperately wanted. And Summer's family are moving to the other side of town. Their friendship has kept Emma going since her mum's death but now things are changing between them and change isn't something Emma can outrun.

Set in tropical Darwin, White Noise is an achingly true portrayal of girlhood, grief, and autism from the authentic and gripping voice of debut author Raelke Grimmer.

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    • Books+Publishing

      July 9, 2024
      White Noise is the captivating debut YA novel by Darwin-based author Raelke Grimmer. Fifteen-year-old Emma’s mum died three years ago, and she and her emergency-doctor father survive in a monotonous, accepted routine. Despite experiencing ‘shutdowns’ that leave her bedridden, Emma throws herself into beach volleyball training for the Sports Institute program. Add a burgeoning relationship with an older student, Elliot, and unexplained aloofness from her best friend, Summer, and Emma is left overwhelmed and confused. The humid Darwin weather is tangible, languid and heavy as we struggle along with Emma, suffocating in her grief. Emma is a richly drawn character, and her teen anxieties are compounded by her autism diagnosis, which is presented credibly and distinctly without being didactic or performative. Her friends are understanding and protective, especially when Emma is subjected to ableist behaviour from Elliot and his mates when they misunderstand her lived experience of being neurodivergent. Grimmer deftly handles an achingly moving story about loss and teenage confusion with nuance and confidence. The short, staccato prose conveys substantial depth of meaning and the recurring analogy of grief and tidal waves is particularly affecting. White Noise is an assured and wonderful debut and a welcome addition to any high school library for teens aged 14+ and fans of Helena Fox’s How It Feels to Float and Cath Crowley’s Words in Deep Blue.

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Languages

  • English

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