THE CLOUD CHAMBER

June 2005
Simon & Schuster Atheneum/Anne Schwartz Books
Cover by Kamil Vojnar

    "Delicately wrought, tense, and matter-of-        
    fact, Joyce Maynard's The Cloud Chamber is     
    one of the saddest and most hopeful books 
    you may ever read. Maynard shows why she 
    began her career as a virtuoso at eighteen, and         
    is now a maestra."
            — Jacquelyn Mitchard, author of The Deep End of the Ocean and The Breakdown Lane

In her latest novel, Joyce Maynard explores the story of a fourteen year old boy, Nate Chance, growing up on a dairy farm in Montana with his little sister, Junie. The year is 1967.

The novel opens with a chilling moment: Nate comes home on the school bus to see police cars gathered around the farmhouse, and his father -- dripping blood -- being led away in a police cruiser. He has shot himself, but as for where he's going, or when Nate and his sister will see their father again, nobody's saying anything.

The novel explores the experience of Nate and Junie, as they struggle to make sense of tragedy, while the adults around them have chosen silence as its only response. Published as a book for young readers (ages 11-14), it's more than a story about suicide, and attempted suicide: The book examines the experience of secrecy and shame in ways that are likely to resonate with many readers of all ages who have experienced their own forms of painful and confusing family silences. It's an ultimately hopeful story about how the brother and sister make their way out of the darkness to locate the truth about their lives in a way that allows them, finally, to survive what might have been an unsurvivable loss.

READ CHAPTER ONE OF THE CLOUD CHAMBER

READ AN ESSAY FROM JOYCE ON THE CLOUD CHAMBER

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