A two-week mother-daughter backpacking trip on Minnesota’s Superior Hiking Trail brings both insight and misery.
Twelve-year-old Jo was looking forward to a promised backpacking trip with her father, when he abruptly abandoned the family for another woman and her children. Jo’s mother, newly divorced and unhappy—and not a hiker—nevertheless gamely volunteered to make the trek with Jo. As the two inexperienced hikers set out with everything they need in heavy backpacks on their backs, Jo’s primary motivation is to go farther than the 100 miles that her dad hiked with Jake, her older brother, when he was 12. Authentic in its depiction of the exhaustion, blisters, wrenched knees, boring dehydrated food, gross latrines, and wildlife dangers that make up a multiday backpacking adventure, the story also deftly contains a nuanced storyline as Jo struggles with not only her physical discomfort but her emotional discomfort as well. She lacks confidence in herself, feels she needs to protect her overwhelmed mother, and has deeply conflicting emotions about her dad. Jo’s love of reading (she brings The Hobbit with her, and other classics feature in the plot) gets a clear shout-out, and her sometimes funny, sometimes gritty, and ofttimes just plain miserable outlook avoids giving the neatly wrapped-up insights a preachy feel. Jo and her mother read white; important secondary characters include an interracial lesbian couple.
Nimbly plotted and deftly insightful.
(maps, author’s note, glossary with photos) (Fiction. 9-12)