Paperback
Young Adult, 288 pages
Square Fish; Reprint edition (September 1, 2009)
English
ISBN-10: 0312594410
ISBN-13: 978-0312594411

Identity.

Where does it lie? In a face? A voice? A bundled string of events we call a lifetime? Is it in our DNA, bone, flesh, ancestry? How do we define our identity, and is it a once and for all definition? Or is it always changing?

This title is available in hardcover, paperback &
e-book edition.

Who am I? Can anyone ever know for sure just what it takes to be who we are?

We all search for our place in this world and how we fit in, but for Jenna Fox that search reaches dark new dimensions when she wakes from a coma and can’t remember who she is. Worse, she doesn’t remember the people who claim to be her parents. There is something curious about them, about the house they all live in--in fact, curious describes her whole life, as she attempts to unlock the secrets of who she was, and who she has become.

The Adoration of Jenna Fox is about Jenna’s search for identity, a quest as old as history, but as startling as the future.

 

More about The Adoration of Jenna Fox:

  • To view the book trailer and more, visit the website at WhoisJennaFox.com
  • Watch for the film coming from 20th Century Fox!
  • Reader Discussion Guide
  • Also in these foreign editions: French, German, Dutch, Australian, Japanese, Chinese, Polish, Spanish/Latin America, Korean, UK, Finnish, Catalan, Spanish/Spain, Italian




 

Awards, Honors, and more for The Adoration of Jenna Fox

2009 ALA Best Books for Young Adults
2009 Andre Norton Award Finalist
2009 Winner Distinguished Work of Fiction CLCSC
2009 NYPL Best Books
2008 Golden Kite Honor Award
Finalist for the 2010 German Youth Literature Award, Deutscher Jugendliteraturpreis
YALSA 2010 Popular Paperbacks for Young Adults
Librarians' Choices 2008
2008 School Library Journal Best Books
Kirkus Best Young Adult Books of 2008
VOYA Top Shelf Fiction 2008
2009 Capitol Choices for Teens
Booklist 2009 Amazing Audiobooks
2008 Texas Lone Star Reading List
2008 Texas Tayshas High School Reading List
Cynsational Books of 2008
Locus Magazine 2008 Recommended Read
Never Jam Today Best of 2008
Not Your Mother's Faves 2008
IndieBound "Top Ten" Summer 2008 Pick
2009 South Carolina Young Adult Book Award Master List
2010 Tennessee Volunteer State Book Award Master List
2010 Rhode Island Teen Book Award Master List
2010 Maine Student Book Award Master List
2010 Kentucky Book Award Master List
2010 Pennsylvania Young Readers Choice Award Master List
2010-2011 Oregon Reader's Choice nominee
2011 Evergreen Young Adult Book Award 2011 Master list (Washington)
2010-2011 Eliot Rosewater Indiana High School Book Award nominee
2011 Sequoyah Book Awards Master list (Oklahoma)
2010-2011 Iowa High School Book Award master list
2010-2011 Missouri Truman Readers Award nominee
2010-2011 Califonia Young Reader Medal nominee
2010-2011 Isinglass Teen Reads Award Nominee (New Hampshire)

***

Critics and readers say:

"[Pearson] raises the ante in unexpected ways until the very last page."
--Publishers Weekly, starred review

"Outstanding examination of identity, science and ethics . . . Pearson reveals the truth layer by layer, maintaining taut suspense and psychological realism as she probes philosophical notions of personhood."
--Kirkus, starred review

"This is a beautiful blend of science fiction, medical thriller, and teen-relationship novel that melds into a seamless whole that will please fans of all three genres."
-- School Library Journal, starred review

". . . quite literally breathtaking."
--Kliatt audio, starred review


". . . this provocative exploration of bioethics is heightened by the portrait of a family under enormous stress and the subtle thematic threads of faith and science woven through the story, making this a thriller with uncharacteristic literary merit."
--The Horn Book Magazine

"This is an amazingly powerful, thought-provoking, just brilliant novel."
--Teen Book Review

"Pearson’s gradual revealing of Jenna’s true identity is masterful . . . this bewitching, mysterious novel is a gripping examination of what it means to be human."
--Reading Rants

"Pearson takes us on a remarkable, often chilling journey in which Jenna questions what makes life worth living and comes out the other side victorious."
--Jennifer M. Brown, Shelf Awareness

"Wow. Just wow. I read this in one sitting, unable to put it down."
--The Reading Zone

". . . poignant, remarkable, unique, touching, true fiction at its best, and perfectly conceived and delivered."
--Teri Lesesne, Goddess of YA Literature

" . . . a stunning, fascinating novel."
--Little Willow

" . . . a story that reads as a teen medical drama but is so much more. Pearson's writing is masterful as she slowly reveals the truth . . ."
--Tasha Saecker, Kid Lit

"Mary E. Pearson has truly created a riveting tale . . . "
--ALAN's Picks

"Blew. Me. Away. This book was sooooo good."
--oops . . . wrong cookie, Texas Librarians Book Blog

" . . . if you only read one young adult novel this year, make it this one."
--Tez Miller, Urban Fantasy Land

"I was hooked from the very first sentence . . . Teens and adults alike will love this thrilling novel."
--A Patchwork of Books

"Holy wow, this was one killer read!"
--Sarah Miller


 

The Adoration of Jenna Fox

©2008 Mary E. Pearson

I used to be someone.

Someone named Jenna Fox.

That's what they tell me. But I am more than a name. More than they tell me. More than the facts and statistics they fill me with. More than the video clips they make me watch.

More. But I'm not sure what.

"Jenna, come sit over here. You don't want to miss this." The woman I am supposed to call mother pats the cushion next to her. "Come," she says again.

I do.

"This is an historic moment," she says. She puts her arm around me and squeezes. I lift the corner of my mouth. Then the other: a smile. Because I know I am supposed to. It is what she wants.

"It's a first," she says. "We've never had a woman president of Nigerian descent before."

"A first," I say. I watch the monitor. I watch Mother's face. I've only just learned how to smile. I don't know how to match her other expressions. I should.

"Mom, come sit with us" she calls out toward the kitchen. "It's about to start."

I know she won't come. She doesn't like me. I don't know how I know. Her face is as plain and expressionless to me as everyone else's. It is not her face. It is something else.

"I'm doing a few dishes. I'll watch from the monitor in here," she calls back.

I stand. "I can leave, Lily," I offer.

She comes and stands in the arched doorway. She looks at Mother. They exchange an expression I try to understand. Mother's face drops into her hands. "She's your nana, Jenna. You've always called her Nana."

"That's all right. She can call me Lily," she says and sits down on the other side of Mother.

awareness

There is a dark place.

A place where I have no eyes, no mouth. No words.

I can't cry out because I have no breath. The silence is so deep I want to die.

But I can't.

The darkness and silence go on forever.

It is not a dream.

I don't dream.

Waking

The accident was over a year ago. I've been awake for two weeks. Over a year has vanished. I've gone from being sixteen to seventeen. A second woman has been elected president. A twelfth planet has been named in the solar system. The last wild polar bear has died. Headline news that couldn't stir me. I slept through it all.

I cried on waking. That's what they tell me. I don't remember the first day. Later I heard Lily whisper to Mother in the kitchen that my cries frightened her. "It sounds like an animal," she said.

I still cry on waking. I'm not sure why. I feel nothing. Nothing I can name, anyway. It's like breathing. Something that happens which I have no control over. Father was here for my waking. He called it a beginning. He said it was good. I think he may have thought that anything I did was good. The first few days were difficult. My mind and body thrashed out of control. My mind settled first. They kept my arms strapped. By the second day my arms had settled too. The house seemed busy. They checked me, probed, checked again and again, Father scanning my symptoms into the Netbook several times a day, someone relaying back treatment. But there was no treatment that I could see. Each day I improved. That was it. One day I couldn't walk. The next day I could. One day my right eyelid drooped. The next it didn't. One day my tongue laid like a lump of meat in my mouth, the next day it was articulating words that hadn't been spoken in over a year.

On the fifth day, when I walked out onto the veranda without stumbling, Mother cried and said, "It's a miracle. An absolute miracle."

"Her gait is still not natural. Can't you see that?" Lily said.

Mother didn't answer.

On the eighth day Father had to return to work in Boston. He and Mother whispered but I still heard. Risky . . . have to get back . . .you'll be fine. Before he left he cupped my face in both of his hands. "Little by little, Angel" he said. "Be patient. Everything will come back. Over time all the connections will be made." I think my gait is normal now. My memory is not. I don't remember my mother, father, or Lily. I don't remember that I once lived in Boston. I don't remember the accident. I don't remember Jenna Fox.

Father says it will come in time. "Time heals," he says.

I don't tell him that I don't know what time is.




 


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