Adventures of Mary Jane

Hope Jahren

Book - 2024

Before meeting Huckleberry Finn, Mary Jane faces deadly illness, treacherous landowners, and swindlers as she goes on her own thrilling journey down the Mississippi in pre-Civil War America.

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YOUNG ADULT FICTION Jahren Hope
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Young Adult New Shelf YOUNG ADULT FICTION Jahren Hope (NEW SHELF) Due Sep 30, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Young adult fiction
Historical fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Delacorte Press 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Hope Jahren (author)
Other Authors
Mark Twain, 1835-1910 (-)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
x, 441 pages : map, genealogical table ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 12 and up.
ISBN
9780593484111
9780593484128
  • Prologue
  • Chapter I
  • The Fire
  • Starting Over
  • Next-Best Everything
  • Chapter II
  • Who I Am, Anyway
  • Chapter III
  • An Old Rascal, and a New One
  • A Visit from Father Potatoes
  • In Which I Am Not Myself
  • Chapter IV
  • Back to Work
  • On the Red River Trail
  • A Family Picnic
  • Chapter V
  • A Happy Reunion
  • Letter from Aunt Evelyn
  • Evening Prayer
  • A Yellow Dress, a Green One, and a Pink
  • A Night at Fort Snelling
  • The First Goodbye
  • Chapter VI
  • Aboard the Minnesota Belle
  • Very Different Country
  • A Change of Plans
  • Chapter VII
  • The Strangest-Looking Woman I Ever Saw
  • In Which I Purchase a Second Ticket
  • Striking a Bargain
  • Chapter VIII
  • Aboard the Galenian
  • Robert Fulton
  • At the Helm
  • Confidences
  • Chapter IX
  • On the Mississippi
  • Trouble Coming
  • Putting into Port
  • In Which I Am Very Useful
  • Questions and Answers
  • Good Luck and Farewell
  • Chapter X
  • Friends and Relatives
  • A Full Basket for an Empty Pantry
  • Meeting Uncle George
  • Ida's Daughter
  • Making Do
  • Chapter XI
  • Two Queens and a Rabbit
  • My Family
  • Unbelievers
  • On the Mend
  • My Me
  • Chapter XII
  • Standing By
  • Queen of the Comb
  • A Turn of Fortune
  • Chapter XIII
  • Monday, Tuesday
  • Wednesday, Thursday, Friday
  • Rocky Ground
  • Chapter XIV
  • Keeping Watch
  • Words to Live By
  • My Witness
  • Chapter XV
  • Homecoming
  • Ashes to Ashes, Dust to Dust
  • All Sorted Out
  • Chapter XVI
  • An Unfriendly Conversation
  • The Trial
  • The Inheritance
  • Another Goodbye
  • Chapter XVII
  • A Familiar Face
  • The Honest Truth
  • Finding Our Place
  • A New Friend
  • A Good, Smart, Strong, Capable Boy
  • Listening Good
  • Chapter XVIII
  • The Teller of Tall Tales
  • Lesson on the Riverbank
  • Your You
  • A Day in Memphis
  • All Good Gifts
  • Moving On
  • Lesson on the Deck
  • Chapter XIX
  • Goodbye and Hello
  • A Short Detour
  • La Douce Tannerie d'Wilks
  • Peter Wilks's Property
  • The Story of a Quick-Sale
  • Cold Nose, Warm Heart
  • Chapter XX
  • A Room of My Own
  • Yorksheer Ways
  • Off to Bed
  • A Taste of Home
  • Chapter XXI
  • My Part
  • Second Thoughts
  • A Trip into Town
  • In Which My Kind Offer Is Refused
  • Murder in the Afternoon
  • Chapter XXII
  • The Peddler
  • A Strange Invention
  • Under the Weather
  • Chapter XXIII
  • In Which the World Falls Apart
  • Girls Seeking Safety
  • An Urgent Message
  • Sheltering in Place
  • The Answer
  • Chapter XXIV
  • An Unexpected Proposal
  • My One and Only Chance
  • On the Road
  • Unafraid
  • A New Plan
  • The House-Call
  • Doing Poorly
  • Chapter XXV
  • My First Dilemma
  • The Cure
  • My Second Dilemma
  • Chapter XXVI
  • The Next Day
  • My Answer
  • Taking Care of My Own
  • Witch-Craft
  • Getting Better
  • Chapter XXVII
  • My Best Plan Yet
  • A Second Homecoming
  • Introductions
  • Th' Oyle Down th' Ginnel
  • Friend or Foe?
  • The Vigil
  • Chapter XXVIII
  • A Mitzvah
  • The Funeral
  • Early Birds
  • Chapter XXIX
  • Thoughts Before Leaving
  • A Surprise Visitor
  • The River Calls
  • Chapter XXX
  • Moving Fast
  • Two Good Men
  • Taking Our Leave
  • Laid to Rest
  • Chapter XXXI
  • Smooth Sailing
  • Just Rewards
  • Better-Laid Plans
  • A Parting of Ways
  • Chapter XXXII
  • A Tolerable Poor Boy
  • Into the Fog
  • Two Travelers
  • Chapter XXXIII
  • Evangeline
  • McDougal's Cave
  • The Real Thing
  • Easy Climbing
  • Chapter The Last
  • A Dream Nursed in Darkness.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 7 Up--In The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Mark Twain gives a scant 30-or-so pages to Mary Jane, "the red-headed one." Twain's readers are left with the confidence that Mary Jane has stolen Huck's heart, but no backstory to explain how or why this should be so. In this companion piece to Twain's classic, Jahren delivers Mary Jane's story in vivid, heart-pounding, nail-biting, soul-stirring detail. It is 1846, and the trading posts and military outposts of northern Minnesota are the only world that 14-year-old Mary Jane Guild has ever known. Her world changes suddenly when a letter from Aunt Evelyn prompts her mother and Morfar (Swedish for grandfather) to send her on a mission of mercy. Mary Jane travels the Mississippi River from Minnesota to Illinois and on to Mississippi and back again. Along the way, she makes friends and foes, learns what it does and does not mean to believe in God and be given to good works, finds the value of the truth, the utility of a good lie, and discovers who she is and where she most belongs. Jahren's first foray into historical fiction is as meticulously researched as her nonfiction narratives without ever seeming tedious or pedantic. VERDICT This imaginative retelling of the story of Huck's red-headed sweetheart is a rollicking adventure full of rich characterizations that will be enjoyed by junior high and high school readers regardless of whether they have read the book that inspired it.--Kelly Kingrey-Edwards

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Mary Jane, a side character from Mark Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, takes center stage. Celebrated scientist and bestselling adult nonfiction author Jahren has chosen as the subject of her fiction debut the girl Huck Finn describes as "just full of sand…beauty--and goodness too." Fourteen-year-old Mary Jane is content to live with her mother and grandfather on the Minnesota frontier, shifting from a remote fur-trading outpost in winter to the comforts of Fort Snelling in summer. But when her aunt begs for help, Mary Jane's mother sends her south via a Mississippi River steamboat, first to Fort Edwards, 400 miles away, and then, in the company of her orphaned cousins, Susan and Joanna, to their new guardian in Greenville, Mississippi. Like her eventual friend Huck Finn, Mary Jane finds adventure, true friendship, and scoundrels on the river. The peripatetic nature of her journey allows for cameo appearances by a wide variety of other characters. White Christian Mary Jane has sympathetic encounters with an Ojibwe family, persecuted members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, and a Jewish peddler, among many others. She meets Sugar and Candy, an enslaved mother and daughter, and her attempts to help them carefully call out white saviorism. Jahren has done a heroic amount of research but most of all has told a cracking good story. This book soars: Huck Finn has met his match in a wildly appealing, smart, and courageous girl. (map, family tree, author's note, suggested reading) (Historical fiction. 12-16) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

CHAPTER I --­The Fire--­ We smelled the fire before we saw it. It didn't smell like a fireplace. It didn't smell like a campfire, either. Do you know what a musket smells like after the bullet's been fired? Or singed hair on a branding iron? Or a shirt forgotten under the iron? Or a wet saddle too near the campfire? Or maple syrup boiled over onto coals? The fire didn't smell like any of those things. It smelled like all of them mixed together. It wasn't the smell of something burning. It was the smell of everything burning. It smelled like the end of the world. When we got closer to the fire, I recognized Ma by her outline. A small black figure with all Hell coming undone behind her. When we got closer still, I saw that it was her back to us. I don't know how she stood the heat: I had to squint my eyes against the hot blast, and she was a good ten feet closer to the fire than I was. Then again, Ma is extraordinary. She's more than tough. Her softest parts are made of steel and hard leather. And smart, too. She can tell exactly what I'm thinking, just from one look at my face. And I can from hers, too. We don't get along overly well. I walked closer, until Ma turned around and saw me, and I saw her, against a background of heaving flame. And the look on her face said, Not again. --­Starting Over--­ We dug. We dug until we couldn't dig anymore. And then we dug some more. Hansel tried to help, but the ground was too frozen for him to do much besides bust up his paws, and finally, Morfar made him back off. He didn't like not pitching in, and made sure we knew it by barking now and then. Bam! Ka-­POW! We heard a terrific noise behind us. The sky lit up, then splinters rained down. It came from at least a mile away, so it didn't rattle us much. It just meant that the fire had burned its way into the gunpowder shed, was all. Morfar paused and leaned against the shovel. " Ja then, we go down to Fort Snelling a little early this year." Ma gave me a look that told me it was my turn to dig. While I did, I felt snow splattering onto the top of my head. It was coming down in big wet clumps and that was a lucky thing. Fire can't jump across snow, and it sure can't jump over slush. Tonight we'd sleep in the barn, less than a hundred yards from the inferno, but just as safe as if we were off on Mackinac Island. I stopped digging when a metal box showed itself out of the dirt. It wasn't filled with diamonds, but it still counted as treasure to us. Four times a year, Morfar buries the last quarter's record books near the creek where the ground doesn't freeze as hard, so he can answer to the Company in case of raids or thieving or fire. Under the records-­box was blankets and medicine that Ma had put in, wrapped in waxed leather. We'd have that, and the clothes on our backs, until we heard the ice break up on Lake Winnipeg. That's what means the Red River's flowing, so you can travel south on it. It's five hundred miles down to Fort Snelling. We know the way because we go down every year to spend the summer and get me at least some schoolroom education. We usually go in May, but this year it'd be March. "Same as in otten-­tirty-­tree after the last full burn-­down." "You were a baby, Mary Jane," Ma added, "you probably don't remember." She said it as if I hadn't paid enough attention at the time. "Each an' every trading post is built on the cinders of the last," sighed Morfar, and he should know, as he's been head clerk for the Company since 1821. There's a difference between being disappointed and surprised, and he was the first but not the second. Really, there's so much gunpowder stored in the Northwest Territory that a person ought to be surprised every time a trading post doesn't burn down, given the oil lamps, the candles, the tobacco pipes, and the rum-­soaked characters lighting them. Ka-­POW! Far behind us, we heard another keg go off like a cannon. We wouldn't be getting any sleep that night, or maybe even the next. Ma and Morfar hoisted what we'd dug up onto their backs while I filled the hole. They turned and walked towards the barn and I followed them, dragging the shovels behind me. I could have walked beside them, but I didn't. I followed instead. It was second nature, as I've been following Ma and Morfar since I was born. They go down south in the spring, and up north in the fall, and I've followed, year after year, for my whole life. Well, of course I do. That's what you do when you're a little kid. But now that I'm fourteen, it feels different. There are times when I don't want to follow, but I don't know where it is that I want to go, either. --­Next-­Best Everything--­ We slept in the barn that night, and every night until we left. We didn't have our goose-­down comforters, but we had the next-­best thing as wool blankets. We didn't have our flannel pajamas, but we had the next-­best thing as long underwear. We didn't get any peace and quiet, but we had the first-­best thing of a carnival going on all around us. To voyageurs, a fire at the trading post means three things, all of them good: sleeping inside, finishing off the rum, and heading south early. I should have mentioned tobacco as well, as there's no way to trace inventory after a burn-­down--­same goes for spirits. The sleeping inside part is just to make the counting of who got out in time that much easier. Row on, row on, another day, Ply, ply the oar and haul away! After the whaling songs started up, we knew the voyageurs would be up all night long and so would we. I, myself, love to hear them, but Ma won't let me join in for fear I might have some actual fun for once in my life. Instead, I sat on a smoked-­up buffalo skin, sipping snow-­melt and freezing my insides. We didn't have our copper tea-­kettle, but we had the next-­best thing as a pewter one that Ma wouldn't let me drink out of because the lead in it would make me grow up stupid. "It's too late for me," said Morfar as he gulped down his tea. When we'd come back in October, there'd be a brand-­new trading post built from the ground up and we'd get our old tea-­kettle back because metal doesn't burn. That one's made of iron so if I do turn out an idiot we'll know it wasn't from that. " Ja, soon as the snow's melted, the Company, you betcha, they'll send a big crew to clean up and start building." Morfar had cheered up. "They'll also send a tally-­man to sift the ashes for teeth and start replacing." Ma had cheered down. Anyway, she's right: a voyageur's life isn't easy or long, and however they got to us, there's more where they came from. Morfar slapped both thighs and stood himself up. " Mari-­yane, let's me and you go for our walk. There's a fine full moon tonight, the kind you should use for some-­ting." Hansel ran to the door and barked, wanting to go with. Him and me and Morfar headed to the pines for our loop through the woods. It was the same route we'd taken since I could walk, and before that Morfar carried me, which I even sort-­of remember. Sure enough, the moonlight reflecting off the snow was bright enough to make us squint. It made the birch trees glow like great bleached bones, like the ribs of the dead whale Morfar found as a boy back in the hjemmeland. He said they were so hungry they ate the rotten blubber . . . but not as hungry as the next year, when they boiled and ate their shoes. "One, two, tree, fjour, five . . ." I counted trees, copying Morfar's hjemmeland accent. "Six, sept, huit, neuf, dix!" I switched to the numbers we used with the voyageurs. Morfar gave me a sum, inventing the numbers as he went. "Tirty-­five and seventy-­six and fjorty-­one less sixty-­two and eleven less tventy less sixteen and fifty-­tree less tventy-­one and sixty-­six and tventy-­five less tirty-­seven less fifty and seventy-­two anna tventy-­otta makes . . ." "Two hundred and one!" I completed his thought. He switched to money: "A dollar and a qvarter plus six nickels and tree dimes less fifteen cents anna half dollar less a dime and two nickels less a dollar and otta cents makes . . ." "One dollar twenty-­eight cents!" I said, more or less automatic. I have a gift for numbers, and I got it from my morfar. He can't read, but he sure can cipher, which is what has kept him indoors as a clerk instead of outdoors as a trapper, freezing his toes off one by one. Excerpted from Adventures of Mary Jane by Hope Jahren All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.