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Jennifer BrownA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Summary
Chapter Summaries & Analyses
Part 1, Chapters 1-2
Part 1, Chapters 3-4
Part 1, Chapter 5
Part 2, Chapters 6-7
Part 2, Chapters 8-9
Part 2, Chapters 10-11
Part 2, Chapters 12-13
Part 2, Chapters 14-15
Part 3, Chapters 16-17
Part 3, Chapters 18-19
Part 3, Chapters 20-21
Part 3, Chapters 22-23
Part 3, Chapters 24-25
Part 3, Chapters 26-27
Part 3, Chapters 28-29
Part 3, Chapters 30-31
Part 3, Chapters 32-33
Part 3, Chapters 34-35
Part 3, Chapters 36-37
Part 3, Chapters 38-39
Part 3, Chapters 40-41
Part 3, Chapters 42-43
Part 4, Chapter 44
Character Analysis
Themes
Symbols & Motifs
Important Quotes
Essay Topics
Tools
In Chapter 10, as Valerie’s body heals, her parents and her doctors address her emotional state, particularly her previous fantasies of murder and suicide. With Nick gone, many fear Valerie, still a suspected collaborator, poses a risk to both herself and others. Given her grave misunderstandings concerning Nick, Valerie questions herself, too. She thinks:
I hadn’t even noticed when the talk increased. Hadn’t noticed when it got personal. Hadn’t realized that Nick’s stories had become tales of suicide. Of homicide. And mine had, too. Only, as far as I knew, we were still telling fiction (174).
Facing the prospect of mandated psychiatric treatment, she projects, “It was all Romeo and Juliet. It was all Nick, not me” (174).
Valerie participates in the in-patient psych program at the hospital, where she commingles with peers that talk to walls, burn themselves, suffer from various delusions, and hurl insults at her. Valerie remains strong so that she can return home. She likens the experience to a Catch-22, where she must admit to being crazy in order to get out of a crazy situation. She despises her therapist, remarking on his disgusting appearance and unimaginative clichés, all the while “his eyes wandering to something more important while I answered his Super Shrink questions” (180).
Ultimately, she leaves “the hospital a ‘case’, but a free one,” discharged into out-patient psychiatric care with Dr. Rex Hieler—intensive treatment, but well worth it to be out of the hospital (183). Even though Valerie feels everyone staring at her on the way home, when she returns, her little brother, Frankie, welcomes her. Brother and sister resume the same joke about Frankie’s spiky hair they shared the morning before the shooting.
Chapters 11 and 12 cover Valerie’s in-patient treatment following the shooting. In a heartbreaking scene that Valerie describes as straight out of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, her mother and Dr. Dentley commit her forcibly, with the help of two orderlies, to in-patient care; the team uses a sedative to restrain a wild Valerie, who thinks, selfishly, before losing consciousness, “Mom cried, too, and I took some satisfaction in that, though not nearly enough” (177). She frantically remembers the nearby recovering Christy Bruter and thinks, as orderlies carry her thrashing body down the hall, “Christy Bruter would have a field day with this one” (176). She manages to mumble sorry to the room, as she passes Christy’s room. Christy, her mother, and father stare out as the orderlies carry Valerie to the psych ward. Even after all this, Christy Bruter’s and Stacey’s perceptions of her still consume Valerie, indicating Valerie has a way to go with maturity and her recovery.
Chapter 12 also provides a commentary on psychiatric care during Valerie’s in-patient stay. In this setting, patients glorify her for her part in the shooting, while therapy teaches her to pretend to get healthy by suppressing her anger; this, in turn, guarantees a release. Valerie ignores the unhealthy, inert, disgusting environment in order to get out. She becomes an ultimate pretender, telling people what they want to hear; she says she understands Nick was wrong for her and that college is the right path.