The Adoration of Jenna Fox
-
-
3.8 • 17 Ratings
-
-
- $7.99
-
- $7.99
Publisher Description
'Why can I remember the details of the French Revolution but I can't remember if I ever had a best friend?'
When Jenna wakes following her accident, her recovery is slow. One day she can't walk; the next she can. One day her right eyelid droops; the next it doesn't.
But at what cost has her recovery come? What are her parents hiding from her? And why does her grandmother, Lily, hate her so?
When the memories do come, they're more than anyone bargained for, and as Jenna struggles to work out who she is, and what exactly makes us who we are, one thing becomes very clear: Jenna Fox is no ordinary teenage girl.
Who is Jenna Fox?
'I read this book in less than one day - it's a real page-turner! I found Jenna's story compelling, and every character is unique down to the last detail...Nine and a half out of ten.' Lucienne, 18
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Sometime in the near future, Jenna Fox, 17, awakens from an 18-month-long coma following a devastating accident, her memory nearly blank. She attempts reorientation by watching videos of her childhood, "recorded beyond reason" by worshipful parents, but mysteries proliferate. Jenna can recite passages from Thoreau yet can't remember having any friends. As memories return, however, Jenna starts picking at the explanation her parents have spun until it unravels. Pearson (A Room on Lorelei Street) uses each revelation to steadily build tension until the true horror comes into focus. Even then Pearson does not stop; she raises the ante in unexpected ways until the very last page. Clues are supplied by the supporting cast: Jenna's father, who made his fortune in biotechnology; a classmate whose loss of limbs has turned her into a crusader for medical ethics; Jenna's Catholic grandmother, who is hostile to her. A few lapses in logic if Jenna's father is world-famous and the family in hiding, why does she enroll in school under her real name? can be forgiven in favor of expert plotting and the complex questions raised about ethics and the nature of the soul. Ages 14-up.
Customer Reviews
Love
I absolutely love this book it’s so amazing and I can’t stop reading.❤️❤️❤️