A 14-year-old girl tries to make sense of a raven’s announcement that she’s a prophet in Heinrichs’ novel.
Call her Jonah. The former Joan Mudgett adopted her father’s name after he disappeared—the same day her mother was murdered, more than a year ago. She’s certain that he had nothing to do with the crime, and she wants only to find the true “evil doer.” It’s now early January, and Joan lives alone in the family house at the foot of Jumper Mountain in New Hampshire, helped out by her teacher and friend, Mary Sullivan. When she’s not rereading Moby-Dick, she often patrols her surroundings on skis; on one such outing, she’s greeted by a talking raven who says, “I am Gabriel, come to appoint you humanity’s most sacred voice.” According to the raven, her prophecies are supposed to “create a favorable carom, a swerve, a divergence” to steer humanity away from terrible events. After other kids at school start a rumor that she hears voices, she’s pressed for predictions, so she makes some at random, expecting them to come to nothing—but they appear to come true instead. Joan decides to admit that she really is a prophet, with her message being that the world is too noisy: “Think how much more you can learn by shutting up. Being quiet.” As the quietness movement hilariously snowballs (and is monetized), Joan finally learns the truth about her parents. Heinrichs has also written three nonfiction books on rhetoric, and his debut novel is utterly engaging and complex as it combines comedy, tragedy, a coming-of-age story, social commentary, timely reflections on the Covid-19 pandemic, and scintillating philosophy about the biosphere. As the raven says, humans miss the beauty of other species’ communications: “You are surrounded by creatures who compose poetry and sparkling dialogues with smells, colors, shadows, and eloquent pauses.” Joan’s outsize impact on world events is made more plausible by her enormous charisma, courage, and independence over the course of the novel.
A profound, witty, and compassionate work with a compelling protagonist and message.