Enter the Body

Enter the Body

Unabridged — 4 hours, 22 minutes

Enter the Body

Enter the Body

Unabridged — 4 hours, 22 minutes

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Overview

“At once tender, poetic and ferocious, Enter The Body breathes new life into the Bard's most tragic heroines. More than a tribute to Shakespeare, this kaleidoscopic, ambitious novel-in-verse gives Juliet, Ophelia, Cordelia, and Lavinia the chance to tell their own stories full of passion, justice, sisterhood, and love. Simply spectacular.”-Michael L. Printz Award winner Laura Ruby, author of Bone Gap

In the room beneath a stage's trapdoor, Shakespeare's dead teenage girls compare their experiences and retell the stories of their lives, their loves, and their fates in their own words. Bestselling author Joy McCullough offers a brilliant testament to how young women can support each other and reclaim their stories in the aftermath of trauma.

Editorial Reviews

AudioFile - JULY 2023

An ensemble cast brings four of Shakespeare's female victims of violence to life in this devilishly intelligent audiobook. Author Joy McCullough delivers the narrative, with Valerie Rose Lohman's Juliet, Victoria Villarreal's Ophelia, and Annie Q's Cordelia soliloquizing, in turn. When the young women start talking to one another, the story becomes one of healing and revision. Their voices are as distinct as their personalities; Juliet's youthful reediness, Ophelia's dreamy softness, and Cordelia's stiff wariness uphold each character's integrity even as she expands beyond the bounds of Shakespeare's imagination. TITUS ANDRONICUS's Lavinia, who is horribly mutilated, cannot speak, but in McCullough's emotionally restrained narration is a haunting testament to the power of healing--and its limits. Cue a standing ovation. V.S. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine

Publishers Weekly

01/16/2023

Focusing primarily on Cordelia, Juliet, and Ophelia, McCullough (Great or Nothing) excavates the inner lives of William Shakespeare’s most famous tragic heroines in this absorbing experimental novel in verse. Beneath the trap door of a theater, the characters—portrayed as ghosts—share their secrets and traumas with one another while waiting to be resurrected to embody their assigned roles and die on stage each night. The author addresses the absent mothers and lack of education the women faced throughout their lives, as well as their roles as scapegoats for the poor behavior of their stories’ male leads, through assorted methods. Wrenching poetic monologues (“Mother found/ less love than I/ in the House of Capulet”), script pages of illuminating dialogue (“I have a question?” Juliet asks Cordelia, who responds, “Oh. We’re talking now?”), and prose that briefly foregrounds a larger contemporary world beyond the trap door (“the audience stretches, unwraps candy, checks their phones”) provide searing, if occasionally pedantic, commentary on the women’s portrayal as docile figures. Via varied signature poetic styles and cadences, such as Cordelia’s traditional iambic pentameter and Juliet’s short staccato bursts, the women question their desires and sexual identities, and together process their individual traumas. Ages 14–up. Agent: Jim McCarthy, Dystel, Goderich & Bourret. (Mar.)

From the Publisher

A School Library Journal Best Book of the Year
A BCCB Best Book of the Year

A Rise Feminist Book Project Title

“At once tender, poetic and ferocious, Enter The Body breathes new life into the Bard’s most tragic heroines. More than a tribute to Shakespeare, this kaleidoscopic, ambitious novel-in-verse gives Juliet, Ophelia, Cordelia, and Lavinia the chance to tell their own stories full of passion, justice, sisterhood, and love. Simply spectacular.”—Two-Time National Book Award Finalist and Michael L. Printz Award Winner Laura Ruby, author of Bone Gap

"Radically creative... This provocative book could inspire all kinds of fresh approaches to the plays, not to mention lots of engaging writing projects for students."—Washington Post

★ “Body turns Shakespeare on his head while honoring h"a radically creative book for young adults who are familiar with Shakespeare’s plays. McCullough resurrects the dead teenage girls Ophelia, Cordelia and Juliet and lets them speak in verse and to each other about their fates. (Lavinia from “Titus Andronicus” serves as a silent witness.) This provocative book could inspire all kinds of fresh approaches to the plays, not to mention lots of engaging writing projects for students. is talent as the girls retells their stories on their own terms.... Truly outstanding.”—Booklist, starred review

★ "By innovatively mining feminist themes of autonomy, exploitation, and patriarchy, McCullough boldly reconceptualizes Shakespeare’s version of the female point of view for a new generation of Bard enthusiasts."—The Horn Book, starred review

★ "Form as a mode of personal expression is conscious, deliberate, and stunningly effective here and elevates this novel above and beyond many run-of-the-mill Shakespeare retellings to a carefully constructed and emotionally resonant consideration of tragedy and autonomy.... This will be a revelation for teens seeking to claim their own narrative as a distinct and whole person outside of adult or societal input."—BCCB, starred review

★ "A strong, powerful look at the bonds women share and the power telling stories has to unburden us all."—SLC, starred review

★ "This entrancing, fiercely feminist examination of William Shakespeare's tragedies gives his female characters the opportunity to tell their own stories."—Shelf Awareness, starred review

★ "Elevates and reenergizes the canon; it’s an absolute must-read regardless of readers’ knowledge or opinion of Shakespeare."—SLJ, starred review

School Library Journal

★ 04/01/2023

Gr 7 Up—Beneath a stage trapdoor, Juliet, Ophelia, and Cordelia gather with the silent and mysterious Lavinia nearby; many others linger in the shadows around the room. As Shakespeare's most famous and beloved dead girls begin to recount their lives, the probing questions they ask of each other encourage them to delve into their own motivations, beliefs, choices, and lack thereof. They begin imagining what would and wouldn't have changed if they'd been given agency over certain decisions and the ability to speak their minds, to be more than just props for their fathers' aspirations. This exploration of their own limitations in the original stories parallels the relationships between fathers and daughters, Shakespeare and his creations, and the ways young women are often used to serve many purposes except their own. Constant shifts among modern, distinctive first-person voices of the girls told in changing poetic formats swirl with the more distant prose sections; previous familiarity with the basic stories of Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet, and King Lear will give readers access to some of the deeper references but even those completely new to Shakespeare will have no trouble following the outline of the stories. All readers will emerge with a more thorough understanding of these girls' stories along with a deep sense of grief for the independence their fathers (and ultimately Shakespeare) denied them. The classroom connections here are endless. VERDICT This work elevates and reenergizes the canon; it's an absolute must-read regardless of readers' knowledge or opinion of Shakespeare.—Allie Stevens

July 2023 - AudioFile

An ensemble cast brings four of Shakespeare's female victims of violence to life in this devilishly intelligent audiobook. Author Joy McCullough delivers the narrative, with Valerie Rose Lohman's Juliet, Victoria Villarreal's Ophelia, and Annie Q's Cordelia soliloquizing, in turn. When the young women start talking to one another, the story becomes one of healing and revision. Their voices are as distinct as their personalities; Juliet's youthful reediness, Ophelia's dreamy softness, and Cordelia's stiff wariness uphold each character's integrity even as she expands beyond the bounds of Shakespeare's imagination. TITUS ANDRONICUS's Lavinia, who is horribly mutilated, cannot speak, but in McCullough's emotionally restrained narration is a haunting testament to the power of healing--and its limits. Cue a standing ovation. V.S. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

2022-12-14
Beneath a theater stage, a group of girls gather.

Girls from some of Shakespeare’s most famous plays appear here as ghosts, sharing the traumas they have endured as the Bard’s works are retold from the perspectives of these lost women. The focus is primarily on Juliet, Ophelia, and Cordelia; they are joined by Lavinia, the daughter of Titus Andronicus, as well as other women. One by one, they allow readers and each other into their worlds of pain resulting from living within the patriarchy. What happens when they are given a chance to retell their stories? McCullough is undeniably skilled with verse, and she utilizes a fascinating structure for the book, with poetry that is intercut with descriptions of the setting written in the style of theatrical directions. These evoke the feeling of being in the audience. These interludes are then intercut with dialogue among the protagonists, discussing the narrative elements of their own tales. But the metatext is at times more compelling than the emotional truths. There is no denying that the important messages here are shared without compromise, especially when touching on sexual and familial violence, but the story struggles at times with making each character’s voice distinct. Nevertheless, their potent anger at the cruel injustices they have suffered at the hands of men is important and comes across clearly even as character development is occasionally sacrificed.

A theatrical experiment with meaning. (content warning, dramatis personae, author’s note, timeline) (Fiction. 14-18)

Product Details

BN ID: 2940175070287
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publication date: 03/14/2023
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

[Trap Room]
(The trap room beneath all the stages, anywhere. The ghost light is perpetually on, but it illuminates very little. Which makes it easier to keep to oneself.

That woman with blood on her hands, for example, always wanders into the same corner, every time she crashes through that great stage of fools to this space beneath. Muttering to herself, but never to anyone else.

The one in the nightgown with strangle marks around her neck—-clutching a handkerchief like it’ll save her from these men, these men—-she usually heads to a corner too, after the fall. But only because she doesn’t know what else to do.

It’s a room, but there are infinite corners.

Enough for everyone to avoid the zealot in singed armor who reeks of the fire that burned her. Or the wild—eyed queen who looks as though she died a dozen deaths before she drank the poison that brought her here. The sisters who killed one another definitely need their own corners.

They crash through, again and again, these women, while the boards above their heads creak with the trodding of the ones who live, or die in glory.

It gets to be monotonous.

But now comes a girl the others aren’t accustomed to. It’s not that she hasn’t been down here before. In fact, she arrived before the rest of them, a violent splotch of ink from the quill of the Bard so young he hadn’t yet mastered his instrument. She is the first draft to his later masterpieces; without her they don’t exist. And yet they can be forgiven for not remembering her; the moment they see her, they do their level bests to shove her from their minds.

You would too. Only I won’t let you.

The jolt this first—draft girl receives when her body crumples to the ground is the least of her concerns. Those concerns are pretty evenly tied between the blood that gushes from her mouth, and also from the end of each arm, where hands should be. But hands are not.

She doesn’t even bother uncrumpling. What would be the point?

But there’s one woman under this stage compelled to help her, one who has known violence herself and is young enough to remember, while old enough to imagine herself maternal, even if she never survives to bear a child. This maternal one—-in a flimsy nightgown that is by design transparent when stage lights hit it exactly right—-approaches the bloody heap.

She strokes the girl’s hair, soothes the frightened creature until she looks up. The woman startles; for a moment she’s not certain whether this girl is prey or predator. Perhaps she is covered in someone else’s blood?

She is—-but not at her choosing. And her lack of hands offers irrefutable evidence that the girl herself has been on the receiving end of some significant evil.

The woman brings forth her handkerchief, the one that causes her such endless trouble on the stage above; she might as well put it to productive use while she has the chance.

It’s a ridiculous thing, flimsy as her nightdress and no match for the ghastly amounts of blood streaming down the girl’s face. But wielded by one who wishes to be of use, it somehow does what it is meant to do.

The girl is still wrecked; that cannot be undone. But she is no longer a horror show. And after everything she’s been through, the miracle is not that she lives, but that she does not want to be alone. She still craves company. She resists the corners.

This girl, her name is Lavinia. Names are important, even if no one says them. Let’s say she’s nineteen. She considers her options. The woman with the handkerchief has already retreated. The women in the corners are there for a reason.

There are other girls who want nothing to do with corners, though. Cordelia, seventeen, sits in the center of it all. Bedraggled, she’s clearly been through some shit, but it’s more important than anything that she keep it together, that you not see the struggle.

And nearby, another girl. Ophelia, fifteen, is soaking wet. Absolutely drenched. There may be a few leaves in her hair.

Lavinia watches these girls—-calligraphy to her splotch of ink—-who resist the corners. They see her, but their gazes glance off her. They are shoving her from their minds, like I said they would. In fairness, they both have a lot going on, even if they aren’t missing appendages.

Ophelia is not okay, but she’s not trying to conceal it. She is soaking wet, after all. It’s pretty hard to hide that something has gone awry. She doesn’t just walk around like this, normally, with pond scum clinging to her dress. This is not usual, except for every time the water drags her down and she crashes into this purgatory.

Cordelia is used to ignoring Ophelia. But now this third girl is here. Watching. Disturbing the norms of the trap room. Cordelia thought she was alone. She’s used to being alone. Her own sisters are there, each in their own corners, and even they don’t glance toward her. It’s not that Cordelia likes it this way; it’s just the only way it’s ever been, even up above, and how on earth is she supposed to adjust to something new at this point?

Anyway.

Here they are. For a while. Time doesn’t mean much in this place. They’ve just arrived, or maybe they’ve languished for an eternity, when Juliet crashes through.

Juliet, age thirteen, is also not okay. This is evidenced by the dagger in her heart. She’s making a big production of it too. Even Cordelia can’t look away as the girl wrenches the dagger from her chest and makes a show of figuring out where to put it. Like it matters.

Ophelia considers approaching her, helping her. She’s not sure how, or if she’s allowed, as though there are rules here. But when your world has been composed entirely of rules—-rules that landed you here, in fact—-it’s a difficult adjustment.

Lavinia flinches at the sight of the dagger. She’s safe now—-at least until she’s called back up and it starts all over again—-but logic is nothing against her memories of what a blade can do. Anyway, it’s not like she could help; she doesn’t have hands.

Cordelia works hard to act as though the others aren’t there. She has had enough of dramatic, bleeding girls to last a lifetime. Or an eternity, as it were.

Once Juliet figures out the dagger situation—-all she has to do is release it and it’s gone, which is a lesson that might have been valuable to learn sooner, but what this eternity has no time for is regret—-her gaze lands on Lavinia.

And then darts away—-I told you it would—-and searches desperately for something else, someone else to latch on to. It’s harder for Juliet to shove Lavinia from her mind. Perhaps it’s their shared experience with daggers. Perhaps it’s her youth. She would have nightmares, if sleep were permitted here.

Ophelia allows her eye to be caught. She understands Juliet’s panic and glances apologetically toward Cordelia, as though it’s her fault this other girl won’t acknowledge their presence.

Juliet isn’t bothered. It won’t be the first time she’s been required to wrest attention from the unwilling.)


a rose by any other name

You think me weak

that I would plunge

a blade into my heart

because the boy I loved

lay lifeless at my side.

But love is weakness.

Love is ripping out

your beating heart, laid bare

to the slings and arrows

of outrageous fortune.

Or maybe that vulnerability

is a kind of strength.

Hard to say

while the blood

drains from my body.




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