A Northern Light by Jennifer Donnelly

August 30, 2009
3 Comments

A Northern Light by Jennifer Donnelly
Main Characters: Mattie Gokey, Grace Brown

Summary:

Sixteen-year-old Mattie Gokey has big dreams but little hope of seeing them come true. Desperate for money, she takes a job at the Glenmore, where hotel guest Grace Brown asks her to burn a bundle of secret letters. But when Grace’s drowned body is fished from the late, Mattie discovers the letters reveal the grim truth behind a murder.

Set in 1906 against the backdrop of the murder that inspired Theodore Dreiser’s An American Tragedy, this astonishing novel weaves, romance, history, and a murder mystery into something moving, real, and wholly original.

Anna’s Thoughts

5 stars
por•ten•tous
This is by far one of my favourite books, for so many reasons!

My second favourite thing about A Northern Light is Mattie. I love Mattie, she is a very rare type of person (I’ve come to find out) which I have been blessed with of having plenty of in my family. The type of person that will do anything within their power for their family, even though it’s not exactly what they want to do with their life. Mattie puts her dreams aside to help her father and her family until she finally meets a tutor that lets her know that it is okay for her to follow her dreams, and pushes her to do exactly that! Donnelly also managed to tug on my heartstrings with Mattie’s struggle with how to deal with Grace, and the secret that only the two of them, and one other person the police can’t find, share. Throw in a cute boy who isn’t so smart, and doesn’t expect much of her, a black best-friend (remember: this was 1906), and a pack of friends whose mother deals with some extreme problems, and you have one little girl with a big weight on her shoulders. Yet, Mattie manages to handle it all in stride, grace, and with hope for the future. Mattie is honestly one of the strongest, most believable, honest, likable, and well written characters I have ever had the pleasure of reading.

My third favourite thing about the book is Mattie and Weaver’s word games. Often times when they’re throwing words back and forth, I found myself trying to play along – choosing words neither of them had said yet – and often times I also failed. I love reading, I love writing, but a large vocabulary of words has never been my strongest suit. Therefore it was awesome being able to read an amazing story as well as learn some new things (words) along the way, more-so than usual.

The number one thing that I absolutely love the most is actually a combination of two things: 1, the fact that Grace Brown was once a real person, and her story really happened; 2, the writing. Grace’s story is so utterly heartbreaking (maybe more so cause I’ve read anything I could find on it), and Jennifer Donnelly did such an amazing job of combining something she wasn’t even alive for into a world she never got to see so authentically. I never questioned what she described, any of the language, people, settings, etc. While reading the book for all I know, she HAD been alive and HAD witnessed the horrific incident on Big Moose Lake.

You can find out more about Grace and her story on Wikipedia and truTV Crime Library.

3 Comments »

 
  • On August 31, 2009, Gina said:

    Wow! Great review! You can really see how much you enjoyed reading it….might have to investigate this one for myself! (once I shuffle some of the TBR mountain down!)

    Gina =0)

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  • On September 2, 2009, Lana said:

    I really enjoyed reading this one, too! Mattie was wonderful, and I liked the idea of weaving Grace Brown’s story into the narrative. I knew nothing about her before this book!

    Also, thanks for linking to the TruTV site! I really liked your review, so I’ve linked to it here.

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  • On September 13, 2009, Lea said:

    I should really pick this book up! Awesome review!

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