My latest reading adventure has been The Adoration of Jenna Fox. The novel is about Jenna Fox, a 17 year old girl who has just awakened from a year-long coma caused by a terrible car accident. She struggles to remember anything--she is completely blank. She can't even remember her parents--she just knows that they're her parents. That's about it. They have given her a selection of home videos from before her accident so that hopefully they will jog her memory and she will recover as quickly as possible. She and her family formerly lived in Boston, but have moved to a small town in California for reasons unknown until the middle of the book.
Jenna struggles to find out who she really is and struggles to get to know herself. But, she tries to adjust to her new life in the best way she can. She ventures out into the open and meets some of her neighbors, much to her mother's and grandmother's discontent. She even starts going to school and makes new friends.
As a reader, I thought that this book was very monotonous at the beginning, but I continued reading it because I thought I should give it a chance. I have a habit of abandoning books based solely on first impressions, but I didn't want to do that this time. As I progressed deeper into the book, it got a lot more enjoyable and suspenseful, and now I'm enjoying reading it.
I especially enjoy the author's (Mary E. Pearson) writing craft. She uses many different syntactical techniques in her writing. She clumps collections of short sentences together and sometimes she uses very long sentences. At the most dramatic points in the novel, the syntax helps make them even more dramatic. Since the book is first person, she also uses the right voice that a 17 year old would use.
One of the main themes that I have taken away from the novel so far is that one doesn't always know themselves as well as they think they do. Once in a while, everybody should reflect on who they really are and what they really want, which is not always what everybody else wants. Everybody is their own, individual person and everyone should embrace that fact.
I absolutely can't wait to see what happens next in the novel!
After reading your summary of the book it made sense to how the theme would relate.It was particularly interesting to realize how this theme is something that everyone has or will experience or go through in their life time.
ReplyDeleteYour description of this book was so amazing and detailed. I got a very clear picture as to what would one expect from reading it. I have not read it but your description makes the book sound really interesting.
ReplyDeleteI think your post was extremely in depth and descriptive! Now I want to read this book! I vaguely reminded of the book, "Cinder" by Marissa Meyer...
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