A Northern Light

by Jennifer Donnelly | Literature & Fiction | This book has not been rated.
ISBN: 0152167056 Global Overview for this book
Registered by PostMuse of Wellfleet, Massachusetts USA on 3/21/2003
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2 journalers for this copy...
Journal Entry 1 by PostMuse from Wellfleet, Massachusetts USA on Friday, March 21, 2003
Another teen book for my growing pile.

From Amazon:
t's 1906 and 16-year-old Mattie Gokey is at a crossroads in her life. She's escaped the overwhelming responsibilities of helping to run her father's brokedown farm in exchange for a paid summer job as a serving girl at a fancy hotel in the Adirondacks. She's saving as much of her salary as she can, but she's having trouble deciding how she's going to use the money at the end of the summer. Mattie's gift is for writing and she's been accepted to Barnard College in New York City, but she's held back by her sense of responsibility to her family--and by her budding romance with handsome-but-dull Royal Loomis. Royal awakens feelings in Mattie that she doesn't want to ignore, but she can't deny her passion for words and her desire to write.

At the hotel, Mattie gets caught up in the disappearance of a young couple who had gone out together in a rowboat. Mattie spoke with the young woman, Grace Brown, just before the fateful boating trip, when Grace gave her a packet of love letters and asked her to burn them. When Grace is found drowned, Mattie reads the letters and finds that she holds the key to unraveling the girl's death and her beau's mysterious disappearance. Grace Brown's story is a true one (it's the same story told in Theodore Dreiser's An American Tragedy and in the film adaptation, A Place in the Sun), and author Jennifer Donnelly masterfully interweaves the real-life story with Mattie's, making her seem even more real.

Mattie's frank voice reveals much about poverty, racism, and feminism at the turn of the twentieth century. She witnesses illness and death at a range far closer than most teens do today, and she's there when her best friend Minnie gives birth to twins. Mattie describes Minnie's harrowing labor with gut-wrenching clarity, and a visit with Minnie and the twins a few weeks later dispels any romance from the reality of young motherhood (and marriage). Overall, readers will get a taste of how bitter--and how sweet--ordinary life in the early 1900s could be. Despite the wide variety of troubles Mattie describes, the book never feels melodramatic, just heartbreakingly real.

Journal Entry 2 by PostMuse from Wellfleet, Massachusetts USA on Friday, January 21, 2005
I've offered this on BookRelay because I really can't see that I am going to have time for it anytime in the near future and it is just too good a book to let sit and gather dust.

Journal Entry 3 by CandyDarling from Helsinki, Uusimaa / Nyland Finland on Tuesday, February 1, 2005
Received the book today, thank you Zmrzlina!

Wow. Just wow. This is one of those rare books that are so amazing, that you just can't find the words to describe how good it really is. The protagonist, Mattie, is a gifted writer and has been accepted to Barnard College, but her family is struggling after her mother died and her brother left, and she does not know if she will be able to attend college.

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