Thursday, December 28, 2023

The Measure of Silence by Elizabeth Langston

THE MEASURE OF SILENCE by Elizabeth Langston is a work of historical fiction that merits broader readership. The story, set in Texas and North Carolina, spans multiple generations of a single family but mainly centers on life events for Mariah, and her granddaughters, Jessica and Raine. Mariah, who faces abuse as a child, comes of age in the 1960s.  November 22, 1963 is a memorable day for so many Americans, but particularly for Mariah who witnesses JFK’s assassination and the birth of a child. Langston uses flashbacks to describe those events and Mariah’s troubled childhood while also setting several chapters in the present day and highlighting work and relationship challenges for Jessica, a news producer, and Raine, a forensic accountant. The sisters are well-positioned to unravel a shattering family secret and readers will empathize with those involved. Deftly writing about forgiveness (“Good people do bad things, but their reasons matter.”), Langston also explores attitudes towards mental health in the 1960s, specifically PTSD and post-partum depression, and towards neurodivergence today. THE MEASURE OF SILENCE could function well as a book club selection and several thoughtful discussion questions are included.  

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