Reviews

Nature Girl by Jane Kelley

maurakeaney's review

Go to review page

2.0

I found Nature Girl through a library catalog search, looking for chapter books about the Appalachian Trail for my 6 year old son who has a sudden passion for books about hiking the AT. I am glad I decided to read it first before reading it to him, as it was a disappointment that I won't rush to read out loud to him.

We had recently finished Halfway to the Sky by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley, another middle grade book that sounds, on its surface, strikingly similar to Nature Girl: a tween girl, disaffected from her parents, runs away and hikes the Appalachian Trail by herself. But that's where the similarities end. Where Dani from Halfway to the Sky is deeply traumatized by her brother's death, her father's abandonment, and her mother's emotional rigidity, Megan from Nature Girl is simply peeved at her well-meaning parents for restricting her television and cell phone use, and (even knowing plenty of moody tweens in real life) Megan is self-centered in an astonishing, cartoonishly obnoxious way that makes her character nearly intolerable to spend time with in each chapter. Whereas Brubaker Bradley's book has a finely drawn, vivid sense of place and very realistic details about surviving each day's hike on the AT, Nature Girl has only vague descriptions of entire days on the trail, and it is utterly unbelievable that a completely unprepared girl with no hiking experience, no equipment, and little water
Spoilercould survive as long as she did, even considering the trail angels who helped her along the way
.

Given my son's enthusiasm for hiking books - which are surprisingly rare - I probably would have read it to him if the ending weren't so bad.
Had Megan's character shown any kind of genuine development, but she was nearly as astonishingly selfish at the end of the book as she was in the beginning. Yes, she did become surprisingly more determined to finish the hike, but I couldn't see that as admirable dedication as much as jaw-dropping, inexcusably selfish stupidity, especially knowing that helicopters, dogs, and volunteers were looking for her. Worse, when she finished the hike, everyone around her was accommodating and apologetic to her, as if they bore any responsibility for her irresponsible decision, and then she was rewarded with what she wanted so peevishly in the first place, her suffering friend's companionship. And her parents' half-hearted effort at assigning her a consequence was simply ridiculous - the cost of the helicopter and rescue squads was going to come out of her allowance? Realistically, it would be the cost of a college education, never attainable by an 11 year old. I wanted to throw my book at the wall.

Normally, I would not sit in judgment of an 11 year old's character flaws...11 year olds are allowed to be obnoxious occasionally, as developmentally appropriate. But I've never known a kid of any age to be so astonishingly horrible to a friend whose mother had cancer, and usually an adult author will allow a character to grow in maturity in a "coming of age" story, so there is some redeemable aspect to a journey like a solo hike on the AT. But lacking the realistic details of the hike plus lacking any true character development, I just couldn't have my 6 year old spend any time with this unenjoyable character, so I'm returning Nature Girl to the library.

dianalrendina's review

Go to review page

3.0

The tone for the first half of the novel is really annoying and whiney, but it gets better. The story - a girl who's having a "difficult" summer gets lost in the woods, stumbles upon the Appalachian trail and decides to hike to where her best friend is staying - is interesting, although a bit unlikely. Really, I think I'm just a sucker for any kind of novel that has to do with hiking.

janinam's review

Go to review page

3.0

The Cover 2 Cover Book Club liked this book! We thought it was realistic, and though we did not like Megan at first, we eventually did. She changed and learned how hard it was for Lucy to handle her mother's sickness, and as a result, Megan dedicated her hike to Lucy's Mom. We would recommend this book to people who like books about perseverance and adventure.

protoman21's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

An enjoyable story about a girl getting lost in the woods then finding the Appalachian Trail and deciding to hike to where her friend lives. The story is fun and real enough feeling, and the danger is appropriately presented for the audience, but this definitely is not Hatchet. It did bring back my desire to hike again and especially on the AT.

cookiegecko's review

Go to review page

2.0

It was okay

annetjeberg's review

Go to review page

3.0

This was my first co-read with the eldest. She picked it, or she said it was the first book she had laying around from the library, so this is what we read.

Overall, I found the book to be okay. Very timely for us, as she is close to age to Moody Megan (she really gets on your nerves) and has quite some similar thoughts. We both came with different conclusions on what was important about the book and the story, so that was interesting.

It was okay, good for reading together and we had an interesting discussion after.

kimz95's review

Go to review page

3.0

2.5 stars.
I love reading about hiking and the Appalachian trail. This book was a bit... strange to me though... An eleven year old, hiking, alone? She seemed much wiser, yet more dumb than an eleven year old. I felt like the character (the thoughts, actions etc. that would be suitable for her age) wasn’t very well thought out.. But I loved reading about the AT & about hiking.

mterry's review

Go to review page

2.0

I liked the character arc of Megan in this book. She started out sullen and whiney and really gained some perspective. I would have given it 3 stars if it weren’t for the glaring error. Anyone who has researched the Appalachian Trail for more than 5 minutes knows that the blazes are white, not blue. Blue blazes are connector trails and off shoots and are not a part of the AT.

wtfisula's review

Go to review page

5.0

Beautiful story where the character has to face a lot of challenges it will definitely leave you on the edge of your seat -- it is an amazing book for children

anneke_b's review

Go to review page

3.0

This was my first co-read with the eldest. She picked it, or she said it was the first book she had laying around from the library, so this is what we read.

Overall, I found the book to be okay. Very timely for us, as she is close to age to Moody Megan (she really gets on your nerves) and has quite some similar thoughts. We both came with different conclusions on what was important about the book and the story, so that was interesting.

It was okay, good for reading together and we had an interesting discussion after.