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Things I Cannot Say

An important and powerful debut for fans of Graeme Simsion and Anne Buist.

Geraldine Mellet

$34.99

Paperback

Forthcoming
Pre-Order now

QTY:

English
HQ Fiction
28 April 2026
Journalist and disability rights ally Geraldine Mellet brings us a wry, clever and ultimately uplifting novel about a young woman, newly paralysed and voiceless, who must find a way to save the day.

Tracey Read is well and truly trapped. A globetrotting engineer in her thirties, as adept at fixing failing projects as she is at avoiding commitment, she's now paralysed after a major accident and warehoused in an aged care facility she nicknames The Last Resort. For the first time in her life Tracey can't just get up and go - not unless she channels her former self and stages a breakout.

Forced to interact with others who live and work in the 'home', Tracey overcomes her own prejudices to find pockets of kindness and community, and with each small moment of independence she claws back, she begins to recognise herself again.

But as her analytical brain comes back online, Tracey notices something darker going on. When her suspicions are ignored by the people in charge, it's left to her to speak up, a tricky proposition given her voice disappeared on the day of the accident and no one knows if it's coming back.

Underestimated, ignored, and facing the biggest challenge of her life, can Tracey expose the wrongdoing happening behind closed doors? And if she does, will she become the engine of her own story, or put everything at risk?

PRAISE FOR THINGS I CANNOT SAY

'Mellet manages an amazing feat - a feisty character that has the reader simultaneously feeling shaken, punching the air, furious at the system and wryly smiling at the dark humour. A poignant story about what it is to be human - without shying away from the difficult stuff yet ultimately full of hope.' Anne Buist, co-author of The Glass House

'Savage, brilliant and funny - Tracey Read is one of the most alive characters I've come across in recent contemporary literature. Things I Cannot Say is original and thrilling. It stayed with me and made me see the world differently, which is about the best thing you can ask from a novel; Geraldine Mellet is a standout new voice.' Kathryn Heyman, author of Circle of Wonders

'With wry wit and dark irony, Geraldine Mellet has crafted a novel that resonates with authenticity.' Shelley Davidow, author of The Girl with the Violin

'I loved this beautiful book, imbued as it is with heartache and humour, sharpness and wit, tragedy and hope.' Suzanne Leal, author of The Watchful Wife

'This utterly compelling story and its cast of memorable characters stole my life for several days and I marvelled afterwards at what had been achieved and how I had been changed.' Carrie Cox, author of Storylines
By:  
Imprint:   HQ Fiction
Country of Publication:   Australia
Dimensions:   Height: 235mm,  Width: 155mm,  Spine: 30mm
Weight:   443g
ISBN:   9781038953438
ISBN 10:   103895343X
Pages:   368
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming

Geraldine Mellet's love of story began in childhood with a hammock and a never-ending tower of books and has been the through-line in her life ever since. After a degree in French and Japanese and a sideline in Bunraku puppetry, Geraldine was spectacularly unemployable until she found her happy place in broadcast journalism. In addition to twenty-five years in radio and television at the ABC, story was also central to her work as a disability rights advocate and coordinator for both the Every Australian Counts campaign for the NDIS and The Lives We Lead social media project. She has also co-written Whose Hand is This, the non-fiction account of how a WA nurse and her husband reinvented their lives after a severe cerebral stroke, as well as being a newspaper columnist and writer of children's TV drama. She lives, reads and writes on Whadjuk Noongar land in Perth, WA. Photographer credit: Jason Thomas

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