Dear
Welcome to the world of the sinner; the world of the lost
souls, the ones who were left vulnerable and found no solace with anything in
life.
These are
the first words that depressed, 20-year-old Jules hears after accidentally
falling into the river near her home. After contemplating suicide for quite
some time, Jules follows in her literary hero’s footsteps. She fills an
overcoat with stones and climbs onto the edge of a bridge, preparing to jump
just as Virginia Woolf had so many years before. However, at the last second
she chickens out and turns to leave, but as fate would have it, she stumbles
upon her coat and slips backwards into the river. However, she quickly realizes
that perhaps she hasn’t died. In fact, she can breathe normally and as she
travels downwards, she discovers a world created for suicidal people. This
world, which mimics the world she just left, seems almost magical at the
beginning. Here she finds company with the bubbly Norah and the solemn,
sunglass-wearing Sid who offers insight and a pair of ears to hear her
suffering. While still alive, Jules discovers that she has lost more than she
originally thought. Not only is she stuck in this new world that seems to hold
secrets just out of her reach, but she also can’t feel anything except for her
emotions, which unfortunately are all pointed in the depressed direction. As
she struggles with her past demons and her utter confusion of what she is
really meant to do in this world, she discovers that in order to be seen and
heard, she has to reach out herself.
Complete
at 65,000 words, Give Me Ears to Hear Me Speak is a young adult fantasy novel
likely to appeal to fans of Jay Asher’s 13 Reasons Why and anyone who has ever
struggled with feeling left out and not knowing how to find their own voice.
Thank you
so much for your time and I hope to hear from you in the future.
Sincerely,
Dani Nau