Dear Nobody

Dear Nobody

First edition
Author Berlie Doherty
Cover artist Sophie Williams
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre Young adult realist novel
Publisher Hamish Hamilton
Publication date
21 November 1991
Media type Print (hardcover, paperback)
Pages 150 pp (first edition)
ISBN 0-241-13056-5
OCLC 26213419
LC Class PZ7.D6947 De 1992[1]

Dear Nobody is a realistic young-adult novel by Berlie Doherty, published by Hamilton in 1991. Set in the northern England city of Sheffield, it features an unplanned teenage pregnancy and tells the story of its effect on the teenagers and their families.

Doherty won the annual Carnegie Medal from the Library Association, recognising the year's best children's book by a British subject.[2] Through 2012 she is one of seven writers with two such honors, having won the 1986 Medal for Granny Was a Buffer Girl.[3] Also set in Sheffield, the earlier novel is a family saga whose point of entry is the Sheffield cutlery industry.

Orchard Books published the first U.S. edition in 1992.[1]

Dear Nobody has been translated into many languages, and the stage version is often performed.

Plot summary

The novel is split between two points of view, a first-person narrative presenting the events as Chris recalls them in retrospect, interspersed with a series of letters from Helen to their unborn child (Nobody), telling her side of the story as she experiences it. The framing sequence is set in autumn as Chris is on the verge of leaving for Newcastle University. A parcel of letters is delivered for him, and he recognizes Helen's handwriting. He begins to read the letters, all addressed to "Dear Nobody", and they remind him of the past nine months. The subsequent chapter headings are all the names of months, beginning with January.

Helen and Chris make love for the first, and only, time. Chris is prompted to ask his father about his marriage breakdown, and decides to get in touch with his mother. Shortly afterwards Helen begins to fear she is pregnant. Chris is disturbed by her distant behaviour. In late February she finally tells him her suspicions, and writes her first letter to "Dear Nobody": "You're only a shadow. You're only a whisper... Leave me alone. Go away. Go away. Please, please, go away."

Later when a pregnancy test proves positive, she tries to abort the pregnancy by going riding, risking her life in a wild gallop, to no avail. In April, Helen's mother finds out, and arranges for her to go to an abortion clinic. However, Helen decides to keep the baby. Mrs Garton refuses to have Chris in the house, but he and Helen continue to see each other. They visit Chris's mother in Carlisle.

In June, Helen and Chris sit their A-levels. After they are over Helen tells Chris she has decided they should break up, believing it is best for both of them. Chris is bewildered, and feels bereft. To get away from all the memories in Sheffield, he goes to France with Tom. He meets a girl called Bryn, but cannot forget Helen.

In September, Helen learns her mother's greatest secret – that she is illegitimate, a great disgrace when she was growing up – and finally begins to understand her. When her contractions start, she has a sudden impulse to send her "Dear Nobody" letters to Chris. Chris finishes reading the letters, realizes the baby is coming and rushes to the hospital, where he meets his newborn daughter, Amy.

Characters

Chris's family
Helen's family
Friends

Literary significance and reception

Beside the 1991 Carnegie Medal for British children's books, Dear Nobody won the Japanese Sankei Children's Book Award in 1994. It also made shortlists for the Writers Guild of Great Britain Award, the Society of Authors Book of the Year, the Sheffield Award, and the Federation of Children's Book Groups Award. The stage version won the Writers Guild of Great Britain Award in 1992.[4]

Beside English-language editions around the world, Dear Nobody has been translated and published in Bulgaria, Catalonia, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Japan, Korea, Mexico, the Netherlands, Russia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden and Wales.

Doherty describes the book as being essentially about love: "It is about two young people who love each other, but it's also about family love, the ways in which love can go wrong, how sometimes it makes us do things that aren't sensible or that hurt people, how sometimes it turns to hate and drives people and families apart".[4]

The emotional intensity of the novel is well attested: "I have never read a book that evokes so vividly how it feels to be a teenager in love" Daily Telegraph;[5] "The aunt, parents, grandparents and siblings bring in various strands of subplot that give the book a satisfying complexity while losing nothing of the intensity of Helen and Chris's developing predicament and the building pressures they're under." [6]

John Murray's essay on the novel's narrative technique focuses on the novel as a literary artefact and discuses how its structure affects the reader.[7]

Adaptations

Dear Nobody has been adapted as a BBC Radio 4 play, a theatre play and a television film for BBC[8] produced by Andy Rowley and starring Sean Maguire and Katie Blake. The playscript has been published by Collins in the Plays Plus series[9] and it has been performed in schools and theatres around the world.

Doherty is enthusiastic about the productions: "I have seen so many interpretations of Chris and Helen and the other actors that I almost can't remember how I imagined my originals to be! I am just endlessly fascinated by the different ways of representing them, and always impressed by the actors' ability to bring the characters to life."[4]

References

  1. 1 2 "Dear nobody" (first U.S. edition). Library of Congress Catalog Record. Retrieved 2012-07-27.
  2. (Carnegie Winner 1991). Living Archive: Celebrating the Carnegie and Greenaway Winners. CILIP. Retrieved 2012-07-27.
  3. (Carnegie Winner 1986). Living Archive: Celebrating the Carnegie and Greenaway Winners. CILIP. Retrieved 2012-07-27.
  4. 1 2 3 "Dear Nobody". Discussion by Berlie Doherty. Retrieved 2012-09-10.
  5. "Dear Nobody (1991)". Fantasticfiction.co.uk. Retrieved 2012-09-04. See cover image.
  6. "Literature, Arts and Medicine Database". Litmed.med.nyu.edu. 1999-11-05. Retrieved 2012-09-04.
  7. "Seeing and understanding: narrative technique in Berlie Doherty's Dear Nobody", John Murray, March 2005. Retrieved 2012-09-10
  8. Dear Nobody at the Internet Movie Database.
  9. "Dear Nobody: Play (1995)". Fantasticfiction.co.uk. Retrieved 2012-09-04.

External links

Dear Nobody in libraries (WorldCat catalog)—immediately, first US edition

Awards
Preceded by
Wolf
Carnegie Medal recipient
1992
Succeeded by
Flour Babies
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