In the first poem of the collection, "The Puzzle," we watch as the speaker is unsuccessful in her struggle to complete an old jigsaw puzzle she has taken down from a shelf. In "Mrs. Fiske," a poem recounting an incident the poet and her sister observed while growing up, we feel the speaker's outrage at a neighborhood injustice. And with the poem "The Red Toothbrush," Judy Duval reminds us that throughout a life as a daughter, sister, friend, wife, mother, and grandmother, a woman learns that sometimes loss is so great, "such a personal thing...I still can't throw / the red toothbrush away."
The Epigraph at the beginning of Whisperspeak is fitting:
"Word by word, the language of women so often begins with a whisper."
From When Women Were Birds: Fifty-four Variations on Voice by Terry Tempest Williams
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