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Orbiting Jupiter


Orbiting Jupiter


Orbiting Jupiter is a 2015 young adult fiction novel written by Gary D. Schmidt, the author of Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy and Okay for Now. The novel focuses on a Maine family as they begin fostering a teenage father.

Synopsis

Jackson (Jack) Hurd is a twelve-year-old boy living with his parents on an organic farm when his family begins fostering fourteen-year-old Joseph Brook. Joseph's caseworker, Mrs. Stroud, informs the family that he recently spent a month incarcerated at a place called Stone Mountain for trying to kill his teacher while high on pills and also that he has a three-month-old daughter who he has never met. Two days later, Joseph arrives at the farm and closes himself off to the Hurds. Later, the school bus driver hassles Joseph for having a child so young and he refuses to get on, so he and Jack instead walk to school in the cold, which becomes a daily ritual despite the frigid winter. At school, Joseph overall receives little sympathy but is liked by a few of his teachers. One day, his biological father shows up at the farm without warning while he is in counseling and demands to see him, but Mr. Hurd sends him away.

One day on their way to school, Joseph walks down to the Alliance River and steps onto the ice despite Jack's warnings and tries to break it. He briefly stops when Jack yells the name "Maddie", which he has heard Joseph say in his sleep, before giving up and walking back to Jack but falls through the ice a few steps from the shore. Jack is able to pull him out and they return home. Jack later asks Joseph why he went onto the ice, to which he responds, "Maddie liked to skate." After the incident, Mr. Hurd orders them to start riding the bus again. On the bus, Jack is harassed by several other students who tell him Joseph got into a fight with Jay Perkins, another eighth-grader.

Once the ice is thick enough, the family goes ice skating for the first time in the season. Joseph, in a moment of vulnerability, asks the Hurds to help him find his daughter and tells them the story of how she was born. When he was thirteen, Joseph fell in love in Madeleine Joyce, the young daughter of wealthy lawyers, whom he met when his plumber father had a job at their house. Joseph and Madeleine secretly spent the summer together before she went away to preparatory school. He visited her when she came home for Christmas break and she kissed him for the first time. The day before she was to leave again, Madeleine's nanny caught them sleeping together and her parents filed a restraining order against Joseph. Months later, Madeleine died from complications giving birth to their daughter Jupiter (named after their favorite planet) and Joseph was forced to sign away his parental rights under threat of prosecution from the Joyces. Shortly after signing away his rights, he took unmarked yellow pills from a classmate and assaulted a teacher, for which he was sent to Stone Mountain.

A few days later, Joseph is violently attacked in school by Jay Perkins and two other eighth-graders but is defended by Jack. Joseph and the other students are all suspended for four days, but Jack's father commends him for defending Joseph. On Christmas, the Hurds attend church where Joseph relates to the story of Mary and Joseph. When they get home, Jack's parents promise Joseph they will help him see Jupiter.

The Hurds attempt to arrange a meeting between Joseph and Jupiter but to no avail. Joseph's father, having managed to attain visitation rights, shows up at the farm again and indicates that he has abused his son in the past. Mrs. Stroud says that since Joseph is a minor, his father claims he actually has the parental rights to Jupiter and now is refusing to give them up unless he receives money from the Joyces. Joseph's father tells him the only reason the Hurds are fostering him is for the money, but Mr. Hurd says all the money they are receiving is going towards a college fund in Joseph's name.

After weeks of waiting, Joseph is still unable to see Jupiter in spite of support from the Hurds and his teachers, only learning that she is staying with a foster family in Brunswick. Impatient, he runs away from home and the Hurds realize he has gone to find Jupiter. They drive to Brunswick to look for Joseph and split up. Jack enters a library to ask if they have seen Joseph and soon realizes the librarian there is Jupiter's foster mother. The librarian receives a call from her husband who says a teenager (Joseph) is loitering outside of their house. Jack and the librarian drive back to her house where she gives Joseph a new picture of Jupiter, promising to remain in contact with him. Jack's parents arrive and they all return to Eastham.

True to her word, Jupiter's foster mother sends weekly letters to Joseph updating him on his daughter's growth and he finally begins to settle in to his new home and school. One day in February his father, having finally been paid by Joyces and given up his rights to Jupiter, shows up at the farm and takes Joseph away at gunpoint. After they leave, Jack's father calls the police. They later learn that Joseph's father, speeding, drove his truck off the Alliance Bridge and into the river, killing himself and Joseph. Joseph's funeral is held a few days later at the church he spent Christmas at and is attended by the Hurds, Jupiter's foster mother, Joseph's teachers, and several of his and Jack's classmates.

On what would have been Joseph's sixteenth birthday, Mrs. Stroud returns to the Hurd farm and drops off a now toddler-age Jupiter, who is now their adopted daughter. Jack shows Jupiter around the farm before picking her up and carrying her into the house.

Development

The farm owned by the Hurds is based on a real organic farm in East Sumner, Maine, that welcomes foster children and encourages them to develop self-responsible habits. Schmidt based the character of Joseph on a boy he met while visiting a juvenile detention facility. He described the writing process as starting by listening for a narrator, which he found in Jack: "Sometimes it takes longest of all, but it’s everything. So I found this naïve 12-year-old who would grow throughout the book and has questions he’s beginning to ask for the first time. That voice, once it was there…then the book wasn’t too hard to write."

Publication history

  • — (6 October 2015). Orbiting Jupiter (1st, hc ed.). Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 978-0-544-46222-9. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  • — (2015). Orbiting Jupiter (eBook ed.). Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 978-0-544-46264-9.
  • — (December 2015). Orbiting Jupiter (1st UK ed.). Andersen Press. ISBN 978-1783443949.

Characters

Reception

Publishers Weekly and Kirkus Reviews both gave the novel starred reviews. Jeff Giles, reviewing for The New York Times, called the novel warm and reassuring "though it has its share of tragedy."

Awards

Orbiting Jupiter was placed on the longlist for the Carnegie Medal in 2017.

Winner of the 2018 Young Hoosier Book Award (Middle Grade).

See also

  • The Great Gilly Hopkins (by Katherine Paterson, 1978)
  • Jacob Have I Loved (by Katherine Paterson, 1980)
  • Flour Babies (by Anne Fine, 1992)
  • Freak the Mighty (by Rodman Philbrick, 1993)
  • The Tent (by Gary Paulsen, 1995)

References

External links

  • Orbiting Jupiter: A Conversation with Author Gary Schmidt on YouTube

Reviews

  • MacGregor, Amanda (13 October 2015). "Book Review: Orbiting Jupiter by Gary D. Schmidt". Teen Librarian Toolbox. School Library Journal. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  • Hunt, Jonathan (23 November 2015). "Orbiting Jupiter". Heavy Medal: A Mock Newbery Blog. School Library Journal. Retrieved 18 May 2018.
  • Leach, Stephen (December 2015). "Orbiting Jupiter by Gary D Schmidt". The Bookbag. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  • Bloom, Sam (15 December 2015). "Review of Orbiting Jupiter". The Horn Book. Retrieved 18 May 2018.

Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: Orbiting Jupiter by Wikipedia (Historical)