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Dicey's Song

Cynthia Voigt

Plot Summary

Dicey's Song

Cynthia Voigt

Fiction | Novel | Middle Grade | Published in 1982

Plot Summary
Dicey's Song is a children's fiction novel published in 1982 by the American author Cynthia Voigt. The following year, the book received the Newbery Medal for excellence in children's literature. Dicey's Song is the sequel to Voigt's 1981 book, Homecoming, and the second installment in the seven-book "Tillerman Cycle."

At the end of the previous book, the four young Tillerman children--Dicey, James, Maybeth, and Sammy--find that their missing mother Liza has turned up catatonic in a Massachusetts state psychiatric facility. The children now live with their "crazy" grandmother Abigail Tillerman on her farm outside Crisfield, Maryland. After their mother left the four of them in a parking lot in Provincetown, Massachusetts, thirteen-year-old Dicey became accustomed to serving as the family's de facto matriarch. Now, she finds it difficult to adjust to having a new maternal authority figure in Abigail, or "Gram," as the children call her.

Otherwise, however, Dicey finds it relatively easy to assimilate to her new surroundings--at least at first. For instance, Dicey makes fast friends with a number of new people in her life, including the music teacher, Mr. Lingerle, her classmate Mina, and an older high school boy named Jeff. Gram's childhood friend, Millie Tydings, even hires Dicey to work at the grocery store she owns. Meanwhile, Gram has always been too proud to accept Social Security checks. But with four grandchildren to care for, she finds she must swallow her pride to support the family.



Naturally, the children wish to learn more about their mother and what might have led her to lose her mind. But Gram refuses to discuss Liza or her other two children. She also refuses to discuss her late husband. Although letters arrive regularly from the psychiatric hospital in Boston, Gram will not discuss their contents with Dicey or any of the other children, insisting only that there is "no change" in Liza's condition.

One day, Gram takes Dicey shopping and uses the opportunity to discuss the results of the recent parent-teacher conferences. Apparently, there are a number of problems Gram wants Dicey to correct: James is pretending to be dumber than he really is because he doesn't want to be seen as a "nerd"; Maybeth is failing her class; and Sammy wears a mask to school each day. Clearly, Dicey's siblings are experiencing some severe identity issues.

Meanwhile, Dicey learns that she may fail Home Economics. And despite her talents as a writer, Dicey is only managing to achieve a C grade in English. In an effort to raise her English grade, she spends a great deal of time crafting a poignant and passionate essay about her mother. Unfortunately, the essay turns out to be so good that her teacher, Mr. Chappelle, assumes Dicey plagiarized it. With the help of Mina, Dicey is eventually able to convince Mr. Chappelle that she really wrote it.



At Thanksgiving, the family eats a big, happy feast with the music teacher, Mr. Lingerle. But while most of the siblings’ school problems have largely been resolved, little Sammy still wears a mask to school and, more recently, has begun fighting his fellow classmates. In a dubious but ultimately effective gambit, Gram concludes that the best way to put an end to Sammy's fighting is to visit the school and beat all his classmates at marbles. Later that day, Dicey declines Jeff's invitation to go with him to a dance.

After receiving a call from Massachusetts, Gram abruptly leaves the three youngest children in the care of Mr. Lingerle while she and Dicey fly to Boston. At the mental hospital, Dicey can plainly see that her mother is dying. While Gram sits beside her daughter, comforting her as best she can, Dicey goes out to buy presents for her siblings with some money she receives from her grandmother. By the next morning, Dicey's mother has passed away. Because it's too expensive to have the body transported to Maryland, Gram decides to cremate Liza. They place her ashes in a wooden box and travel home via train.

After burying Liza's remains under a tree on Gram's property, Dicey feels she can finally let go of the past and move forward. She decides to stop being so afraid of change and to accept Jeff's offer to go to the dance. Conversely, Gram is finally able to confront the past, bringing down the boxes of old family photos from the attic that she had previously forbidden the children from examining.

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