A Quiet Storm

by Rachel Howzell Hall

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For years, Rikki Moore hid emotional breakdowns and obsessive behavior behind the facade of a "perfect" life. Stacey, Rikki's younger sister, was the only on to see the truth.

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6 reviews
Stacy has been taking care of her sister Rikki for as long as she can remember. The only kids of a religious and troubled family, the two try to keep up a semblance of normalcy despite Rikki’s mental illness. After a suicide attempt in her youth, it’s clear that Rikki’s issues are serious.

As they grow up, Stacy begins to lose herself and her personal life in the drama that her sister creates. Bright and beautiful, most people don’t see Rikki’s struggle at first glance. Her loving husband Matt even minimizes its severity.

Hall’s unflinching look at one family's struggle with mental illness is a powerful one. The reason it seems to work well is that you're seeing the situation through the eyes of the sister. She is not the show more one with the illness, but we are able to see the havoc it wreaks in everyone’s life through her experiences. It colors every single day of her life. The overwhelming responsibility she feels to protect and care for her sister puts a strain on her relationship with her husband, friends and family members.

Some of the plot feels melodramatic, but I think that’s intentional. Everything with Rikki’s disease is either high or low and so there’s not a lot of room for thoughtful consideration in the mix. Her moods are driven by guilt, rage, jealousy, remorse, etc. The most disturbing aspect of the disease is that some people around her, like her mother, would prefer to pretend there’s no real problem.

BOTTOM LINE: I found the meat of the story to work a bit better than the ending. I felt like it turned a bit into a cautionary tale with a melodramatic tone, but I still got a lot out of it.

"It's difficult to accept that invisible, indestructible things can haunt a person."

"I didn't believe what I had just said, but I couldn't resist the argument. College does that, you know."
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½
A fine debut novel about a situation faced by so many families: how far can or should you go to help when mental illness strikes? Rikki and Stacy are African American "Irish twins", born 11 months apart. Stacy lives in her older sister's talented shadow and with the spectre of their mother's blatant favoritism for Rikki. But she knows from childhood that Rikki is not "sensitive", but delusional. Her parents ignore the symptoms and charge Stacy with Rikki's care.

Rikki goes on and off her medications, marries, and has a successful career. She cycles through various frames of mind - religious, celibacy, vegetarian - all the while with Stacy as observer and monitor. Rikki's life is saved by Stacy's constant intervention, but at what cost? show more Stacy herself marries and makes her living as a crossword puzzle writer, all the while being completely puzzled by how to live her own life without ceding to her mother's blindness about Rikki and her own strong love for her sister.

There are puzzles about this family - the mother's complete refusal to admit that Rikki needs treatment, and the impact of the father's early death - but the reader can only question and sympathize. This is a heartrendingly unforgettable book.
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If you have mental disorders in your family, you will especially relate to the themes touched on in this story. Bipolar disorder is a horrible illness that wrecks lives and families. Thankfully, the drugs to treat this are getting better than they were in the time period of this book's setting.
Another theme explored in this book is parents and their favoritism for one child over others of their children. This, combined with mental disorders, can be deadly. When a society, and families, refuse to admit to and treat mental illness, that's when the United States suffers as a country with one of the highest rated of gun violence in the world. Well, the NRA doesn't help.
Kudos to the author for a well-written work that deals with these show more difficult themes. show less
I appreciated the author's afterward about raising awareness of mental illness, but the book itself read more like a lurid parable about the potential cost of knowing someone with bipolar disorder. There's some well-observed stuff in here, but I was ultimately baffled by the ending. I suspect I am not the target audience.
½
Kinda slow.......but the main character made the book interesting
I absolutely loved this book. I actually found it one day when I was on the WB website for the Gilmore Girls it was actually on the list of books that Rory read during the show.

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28+ Works 2,933 Members
Rachel Howzell Hall is the assistant director of development for the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California and has written articles for Black Radio Entertainment magazine. She lives in Los Angeles, California.

Rachel Howzell Hall is a LibraryThing Author, an author who lists their personal library on LibraryThing.

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
A Quiet Storm

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
813.6Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English2000-
LCC
PS3608 .A548 .Q54Language and LiteratureAmerican literature
BISAC

Statistics

Members
111
Popularity
291,805
Reviews
6
Rating
½ (3.67)
Languages
English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
3