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Raven Publishing
ISBN: 0971416192
February 18, 2006
Juvenile Fiction
Reviewed By Wendall Sexton
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AN
INMATE’S DAUGHTER by Jan Walker tells the simple story of young Jenna
MacDonald, her mother Lynn, her kid brother Zeke, her grandparents (with
whom the three now live), and the father incarcerated for murder.
It begins with Jenna doing, what her mother tells her, was “the
dumbest thing ever.” Following
a visit to her dad on the island where he is imprisoned, she dove into
the water to rescue a little girl.
As her brother Zeke always seemed to fall into the pool where
they formerly lived, rescuing this girl was only natural.
For
Jenna’s mother, though, such an act was an inevitable attention
grabber. People would know
of her daughter the heroine, thus being made aware of Jenna’s father,
the inmate, thus ruining her chances at becoming the paralegal for which
she had been studying. Therefore,
in the MacDonald household, there was a strict “don’t tell”
policy. Don’t tell anyone
that Bernie MacDonald was incarcerated for murder. Jenna
shares some of the same concerns as her mom, though not for the same
reasons, as she is hoping to fit in with the kids at her new school,
make friends, and simply enjoy being a kid.
Will the Snoops, as she calls them, a group of semi-preppy girls
made up of differing ethnic types (Jenna’s
father is a Canadian Indian) will they accept her if they know about
her dad? Janna wants to
have friend, and she wants to follow her mother’s rules about not
telling; but, she also wants everyone to know what a great dad she has. Typical
teenage angst. Typical
single-mother angst. Typical
wonderful tale of growing up in What
is the stigma attached to having a parent in prison?
How traumatic must it be for a wife, in raising two young kids
without her husband, to face the extra burden of a husband who is a
criminal? Is there a bias
she faces in dealing with people? Do
her children fear the ostracizing of their peer groups? While
this book is not heavy reading (it’s
classified as Juvenile Fiction) it does tackle a heavy topic in a
manner that is neither watered-down nor overbearing.
Jan Walker shows a mother and daughter who are both believable in
their differing struggles. While
Lynn MacDonald’s words in berating her daughter are mean-spirited on
the surface, underneath is clear pool of pain and fear. Every
member of this family exuded their own personable traits.
Jenna and Zeke, Grandma and Grandpa, Lynn – all were very
believable and real. Each
had a character to themselves that was charming to read.
The ethnicity which seemed intent on blending into the theme of
the story, though, it never exuded the same transparency.
Jenna is said to carry a swarthy appearance. Such never
came through in the words of the story – as neither did her father’s
Indian heritage. Also, the
Snoops never looked as multi-cultural as they were.
Their differing heritages never managed to resonate. Nevertheless,
AN INMATE’S DAUGHTER remains an intriguing take on the prejudice of
society. Suffusing
Jenna’s story with the already known cultural biases present in the
world (the differing ethnicities
vying for respect) makes the judgmental attitudes an inmate’s
family face more realistic and believable than an ignorant public would
otherwise have known -- the
mark of a well-written story succeeding in its goal.
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