cover image Genie: An Abused Child's Flight from Silence

Genie: An Abused Child's Flight from Silence

Russ Rymer. HarperCollins Publishers, $20 (221pp) ISBN 978-0-06-016910-7

Permanently strapped to a chair by her deranged father, Genie (a pseudonym) spent her entire childhood in the closed room of a virtually silent house in suburban California. When her nearly blind mother dragged her into a Los Angeles welfare office in 1970, the emaciated teenager could barely speak. Bounced back and forth between foster parents, institutions and her biological mother (her father fatally shot himself in 1970), Genie improved her linguistic skills but ultimately proved unable to master the rudiments of language. Basing this searing, tragic account on an article he wrote for the New Yorker, Rymer tells how linguists and psychologists, eager to test their theories, competed for access to Genie, who now lives in a home for retarded adults, hidden away from researchers by her mother. Rymer suggests that scientists and caretakers treated Genie as a ``wild child'' instead of giving her supportive therapy that might have enabled her to overcome the confining horrors of her childhood. (May)