Cammie McGovern

Cammie McGovern’s novel presents a gripping narrative centered around a young girl’s murder, with the only witness being a nine-year-old autistic boy named Adam. Published by Penguin Books in 2007, this edition spans 292 pages and is written in English. The story delves into two intertwined mysteries: the crime itself and the complexities of Adam’s locked-in mind, as his mother, Cara, strives to communicate with him and help the police uncover the truth.
Readers will find a compelling exploration of the emotional bond between mother and son amid a backdrop of psychological suspense. As Cara navigates the challenges of her son’s autism, she must also confront her own past, including connections to the investigation that complicate their lives. This narrative not only addresses the trauma of the event but also highlights the intricacies of communication and understanding in the face of adversity, making it a thought-provoking read within the realm of literature and fiction.
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Product Description
When a young girl is murdered, the only witness is a severely autistic boy. This acclaimed novel plumbs two mysteries: an appalling crime and the inscrutable workings of a locked-in mind.
Two children wander off from their school playground during recess. Hours later, they are found in the woods: one murdered, the other hiding near the body. Adam, the survivor and the only witness, is a nine-year-old autistic boy who cannot describe what he saw or heard.
Barely verbal on the best of days, Adam has retreated into a silence that Cara, his mother, knows only too well. As a single mother, she has devoted her life to opening paths of communication between her son and the outside world. Now she must interpret the changes in Adam’s behavior‐not only to help him through the trauma of his experience, but also to help the police catch a killer.
A powerful story of the emotional bond between mother and son, and a thrilling novel of psychological suspense, this is a fascinating journey into the mind of a child in crisis and a mother determined to bring him through unscathed.
From Publishers Weekly
This is a difficult book for a reader. Fletcher has a clean, clear voice for the narrator and for Cara, mother of an autistic child who is found in the woods near the dead body of a retarded girl. But her other voices are unconvincing; they all sound so off that it’s hard to distinguish autistic children and adults from those who aren’t. Morgan, the boy who solves the murder, sounds like a deranged adult, while young Chris, who lures a teen bully into the woods, sounds like a peculiar man uttering short, jerky words and phrases. Although wrapped like a mystery, this is really a book about autism, about the numerous forms it can take, about parents who do or don’t devote themselves to understanding and helping their children. All of this is genuinely interesting, but as a novel it’s contrived. The children’s interior monologues give the reader a glimpse into their thought processes, but are so detailed they don’t ring true. (One child distinguishes between “mean” and “cruel” behavior-verbal vs. physical abuse.) The mystery is less compelling than the author’s valuable insights into our “compassion, disdain, terror and pity” for these youngsters.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
McGovern’s follow-up to
The Art of Seeing (2002), centers on a nine-year-old autistic boy, Adam, who witnesses the murder of a classmate. Disturbed by what he saw, Adam retreats into himself, frustrating the police and worrying his mother, Cara, who has watched Adam’s development with a nervous eye since he was diagnosed with autism. Cara is fearful of the effect the murder will have on her son, but she’s also surprised to find the investigation dredging up her own past: the officer assigned to the case is the younger brother of her former best friend, whom she hasn’t spoken to in almost a decade. And another old friend, who might just be Adam’s father, has come back into her life. Tightly woven and gripping, this literary mystery takes several unexpected twists and turns as it builds to the resolution.
Kristine Huntley
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
From AudioFile
A child has been murdered, and the only witness won’t talk. This is fairly common stuff in murder mysteries, but this witness is a boy locked up by autism. Adam’s view of the world around him is interesting, and the plot itself is thought provoking since the reader hears about an assortment of people with communication challenges as the mystery untangles. Julia Fletcher offers a flawless reading that steps back to allow the listener to become absorbed in the story. Unobtrusive and clear, Adam’s voice calmly sheds light on the difficulty of moving through a complicated world searching for one’s strengths. L.B.F. © AudioFile 2006, Portland, Maine–
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