1986 young adult novel by Mary Downing Hahn
Wait Till Helen Comes is a 1986 novel by American author Mary Downing Hahn. It was first published on January 1, 1986, through HarperCollins and has since gone through several reprints. The book won a 1989 Young Reader's Choice Award and follows a young girl that must deal with supernatural events that surround her.[1] The book deals with the subjects of death and suicide, which has led some parents to request that the book be removed from school reading lists and school libraries.[2][3]
Plot
Twelve-year-old Molly and her brother Michael resent their new seven-year-old stepsister Heather. Heather's mother died in a house fire when Heather was three, leaving her clingy and possessive of her father Dave and jealous of the attention he gives to his new wife Jean and her children. Heather constantly lies about Molly and Michael to get them in trouble, causing Dave and Jean to mistrust them. The tension compounds when the family moves to a small town deep in the country, forcing Molly and Michael to cancel the summer extracurricular programs they signed up for. Superstitious Molly is also alarmed that their new home is a converted church with an attached graveyard.
While exploring the graveyard, Heather discovers a tombstone under a tree. The dates reveal the grave belongs to a seven-year-old child, but in place of a name are only the initials H.E.H.
Molly finds Heather one night in the ruins of a house near a pond, talking to a ghost child named Helen. Helen disappears when she sees Molly, and Heather threatens revenge on Molly for driving off her new friend Helen. Molly sees Heather wearing an antique silver locket. Heather gloats that Helen gave it to her.
The family returns from a trip to town to find all their personal possessions destroyed, except for items belonging to Heather and Dave. Heather tells Molly that Helen destroyed their belongings and will do anything Heather asks.
Michael and Molly visit the town library and learn that Helen Elizabeth Harper died one hundred years before. Her mother and stepfather died in a fire; Helen escaped the blaze only to panic and run into a nearby pond, where she drowned. Her parents' bodies were never found. The ruined house Molly saw is the remains of Harper House. Other children have drowned there over the years, with many believing that the ghost of Helen lured them in. Molly fears that Helen plans to lure Heather into the pond.
One afternoon Molly returns home to find a note from Dave and Jean saying they went shopping in Baltimore, leaving Heather unsupervised. Fearing she has gone to Harper House, Molly searches the area and finds Helen persuading Heather to join her in the pond. Molly leaps in and pulls out the submerged and unresponsive Heather. Helen tries to drown them both for Molly's interference. Molly tears the locket from Heather's neck and hurls it into the water. Helen releases them to pursue the locket, allowing Molly to drag Heather to shore and resuscitate her. The girls take refuge in the ruins, but the floor collapses beneath them, plunging them into the cellar where they discover the skeletal remains of Helen's mother and stepfather.
A tearful Heather admits that she accidentally started the fire that killed her mother, but thinks that her mother’s death is her fault, and fears her father will stop loving her if he learns the truth. Helen likewise accidentally started the fire that killed her parents, making her the only person who understood Heather's guilt. Molly assures her that her father will always love her and that she, Michael, and Jean would also love Heather if only she would let them. Helen appears in the cellar and begs her parents' bones to forgive her. The ghost of Helen’s mother manifests and embraces Helen before the two spirits disappear. Seeing that Helen's parents forgave her, Heather feels hope that she, too, will be forgiven. Hours later, Dave, Jean, and Michael rescue them from the cellar. Heather confesses to her father about the fire, and he forgives her. With Heather's guilt now relieved, the family finally begins to bond.
At summer's end, the remains of Helen's parents are buried under a stone angel with Helen, whose full name Dave engraves upon her marker. While visiting their grave, Heather discovers the locket hanging from the angel's hand, along with a note from Helen asking Heather to remember her. Molly believes it is safe for Heather to keep the locket now that Helen is finally at peace.
Film adaptation
On 28 August 2014, actress Sophie Nélisse stated on her Twitter account that she will act in a film adaptation of the book as Molly. She also stated that her sister would act in the film as well.[4] On 12 September 2014, Variety announced that financing and cast were in place and principal photography would commence on the production of a film adaptation of Wait Till Helen Comes. The work would be directed by Dominic James, and would star Maria Bello and the Nélisse sisters. Production was slated to begin later that same month.[5] Principal photography began on 28 September 2014 in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Author Mary Downing Hahn appears in the film in a speaking role, mentioning to one of the producers that as a little girl she had always wanted to be an actress in movies. This is the first of her books to be adapted into a feature film. The movie was released in November 2016.
Reception
Kirkus Reviews praised the book but commented that it would be a more appealing read for "children comfortable with the genre" as the material in the book was "serious and chilling".[6] Vice reviewed the book from an adult's perspective, stating that while the book's resolution would make sense to a younger reader, that they did not believe that the issues would not be easily solved by talking to the adults, as they believed that Heather's troubles did not solely stem from her keeping a secret.[7]
Awards
- Golden Sower Award (1995, won)[8]
- Iowa Children's Choice Award
- Maud Hart Lovelace Award
- Rebecca Caudhill Young Readers' Book Award
- Texas Bluebonnet Award
- Pacific Northwest Young Reader's Choice Award
- Young Hoosier Award
- Virginia Readers' Choice Award
- Volunteer State Book Award
- Dorothy Canfield Fisher Award
- Utah Children's Book Award
References
External links