So, back in probably middle school or early high school I read the first book in this series The Face on the Milk Carton.....and I probably read it several times. My students love it too and so I thought it was high time I finally continued on in the series.
In the first book, Janie Johnson picks up her best friend's milk carton at lunch for a swig after eating her sandwich. This was back when milk cartons had pictures of missing children on them (all you children of the 80's know what I'm talking about). Janie sees a picture of a 3-year-old girl on the carton, and she immediately thinks it is her. But there is no reason why it would be her. She has two doting parents who love her. She can't be the girl, Jennie Spring, on the milk carton. Janie obsesses over this picture, to the point that she actually writes a letter to the family--simply to let them know she is ok. She never means to send this letter; however, it falls out of her binder and someone finds it and mails it to her. It turns out that Janie really is Jennie and she was taken from a mall in New Jersey when she was three by a woman named Hannah Javensen, the Johnson's estranged daughter who had joined a cult many years before. Hannah had brought Janie/Jennie to her parents, telling them that the little girl was her daughter. Her parents had no reason to not believe her. However, because they were afraid that the cult would track them down and try to take Janie from them, they changed their last name and moved. The first book ends with both sets of parents meeting, at an impasse....trying to figure out what to do.
The second book picks up with Janie getting ready to leave the parents who raised her in order to get to know her biological family--two parents, three brothers, and one sister. Nothing goes smoothly. Jodie, Jennie's slightly older sister, had visions of nightly slumber parties with her newly found sister, her biological parents keep thinking that they can wipe away the past 13 years, and her oldest brother, Stephen is angry at the world, but mostly at Jennie for all the stress and pain her disappearance has cause both him and the family....and the younger twins, well, they are so wrapped up in each other that they don't seem to register the latest addition to the family. Every once in a while there is a bright spot where Janie forgets that she isn't supposed to be happy with these strangers, but eventually, she demands that she be allowed to go back to her parents, the ones who raised her.
There are three more books in this series, with the last one having been published just this year. So, I think I need to find out the rest of Janie/Jennie's story before another 20 years goes by!
Happy Reading!!
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