Little Girl Gone
-
-
3.6 • 20 Ratings
-
-
- $9.99
-
- $9.99
Publisher Description
Madora was seventeen, headed for trouble with drugs and men, when Willis rescued her. Fearful of the world and alienated from family and friends, she ran away with him and for five years they have lived alone, in near isolation. But after Willis kidnaps a pregnant teenager and imprisons her in a trailer behind the house, Madora is torn between her love for him and her sense of right and wrong. When a pit bull puppy named Foo brings into Madora's world another unexpected person--Django Jones, a brilliant but troubled twelve-year-old boy--she's forced to face the truth of what her life has become.
An intensely emotional and provocative story, Little Girl Gone explores the secret hopes and fears that drive good people to do dangerous things . . . and the courage it takes to make things right.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Madora's father's suicide when she was 17 sends her on a path of drugs and partying, and into the controlling arms of Willis Brock, with whom she lives in rural seclusion until he brings home Linda, a pregnant, frightened teen he claimed to have seen begging on the street. Willis locks up Linda under the auspices of getting her clean, but after she gives birth, he sells her baby and keeps her imprisoned. The gullible Madora believes Willis's reasons for keeping Linda and becomes friendly with a 12-year-old orphan named Django Jones, whose repeated unannounced visits threaten to unravel Willis's secret. But it's actually Django's worldliness that inspires Madora to finally stand up to Willis. Campbell's newest (after The Good Sister) explores themes of imprisonment literal, emotional, and psychological. Madora is timid and easily manipulated, but readers will still sympathize, despite the contrived nature of her friendship with Django. Though Willis never seems quite as menacing as he's supposed to, this works to the book's advantage; if he were any scarier it would feel exploitative. Strong and touching, but little to hold onto.
Customer Reviews
Ok if it is free
Bizarre is the best way to describe this one. It was so unbelievable and I'm not sure what the point was at all. At the end, I really wouldn't have cared if a nuclear bomb killed everyone. Actually, that might have worked better.