Book Description
for Enter the Body by Joy McCullough
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Four of Shakespeare’s young female characters—Lavinia, Cordelia, Ophelia, and Juliet—have died countless times on stage and will do so countless more, because that is how their stories were written. Until now. Gathered in the “Trap Room,” the space beneath the stage, they begin to share the unscripted parts of their lives. In differing verse narrative styles, Juliet, Ophelia, and Cordelia each reveal that they are so much more than characters in service to a plot. They are young women who live and dream and laugh and ache, who long for lost mothers, lost opportunity, and lost love. Soon they begin to converse, an entertaining exchange in 21st-century young adult voices in which they poke and prod and critique, challenging one another to shape their stories into something new. None of them is initially so bold as to imagine a wholly different outcome for herself, but when Cordelia, the most cynical and eye-rolling among them, figures out why silent Lavinia has not spoken—her tongue has been cut out and hands cut off so she cannot name her rapist—she understands that speaking up when others can’t is necessary, and imagining boldly is an act that lifts them all. This fiercely imaginative, astonishingly original and arresting work is a novel that can also be read as a play. Just as it challenges its characters, it challenges readers to think critically about these young women’s narrow existence on the stage, and the expansive possibilities of their lives. (Age 14 and older)
CCBC Choices 2024. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2024. Used with permission.