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Whatever Happened to Janie? (The Face on the Milk Carton Series)

(Book #2 in the Janie Johnson Series)

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

In the vein of psychological thrillers like We Were Liars, Girl on the Train, and Beware That Girl , bestselling author Caroline Cooney's JANIE series delivers on every level. Mystery and suspense... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Fascinating hypothetical

I read the first book in this series, "The Face on the Milk Carton," because year after year, I would see it on the summer reading list for a local school. Curiosity got the better of me and I bought it. I was so engrossed in the story that I just had to read the sequel (and this book is for young people whereas I'm an adult!!). Anyway, an impoprtant issue is raised; what happens when birth parents want custody of a child who has been raised by other parents? Here, Janie Johnson had discovered she was actually Jennie Springer and, as a teenager, she was now living with the Springers in New Jersey after having been raised for nearly 12 years by the Johnsons in Connecticut. She knows the Johnsons as her parents but she turns out to be the long lost daughter of the Springers (she had been kidnapped). A teenager's reality and sense of who she is is suddenly changed. Her birth parents and siblings are unquestionably good people but Jennie's identity and sense of reality is as Janie, the daughter of Frank and Miranda Johnson. The Springers were victims, their daughter was kidnapped. Now they want their daughter back. However, doing what is right for the Springers is traumatic for their daughter. Meanwhile, the Johnsons are being hurt too since they were not culpable in the kidnapping. On the one hand, the Springer family wants to have a relationship with their daughter and sister. On the other hand, the Johnsons are losing the teenager they have come to know as their daughter. This story is actually somewhat topical because every now and then, there is a story in the news about someone who is being raised by one set of parents getting involved in a custody battle with another set. In such a case, someone is bound to get hurt. Seeing this difficult situation from the eyes of the child makes for a riveting story. She is put into the position of having to form relationships with strangers who are actually her closest family. They are wonderful people but from a different economic background and with different values. She is suddenly in a strange new school as she leaves her closest friends behind. I recommend this book and I intend to read the additional sequels (there are two more).

who is she?

Janie Johnson has just lived through a nightmare. She discovered that she was kidnapped as a child, and now she is back with her birth family, the Springs. They had moved on with their lives, but Janie's (whose real name is Jennie) disappearance cast a shadow over everything. Now Janie has been put back with the Springs. She is traumatized by her findings, and is having a horrible time trying to fit in. Her siblings are angry at how their lives were dramatically changed, and shocked that their sister, who they thought was dead, is back. Her parents are tender but cry at any moment. Janie wants to go back to her old family and old life. Her siblings want revenge. Will Janie be able to fit in, or will she hurt her family once again by returning to the people they think kidnapped her?

An Identity Crisis

Whatever Happened To Janie? is the exciting sequel to 'The Face on The Milk Carton. Janie Johnson now lives in New Jersey with her real family, leaving behind Frank and Miranda Johnson, whom Janie still considers her real mom and dad. Janie is having a very hard time living with the Springs. The Springs are a very nice and caring family. The mother and father who are ever-so-rightly overprotective of the other Spring children: Stephen, Jodie, and the twins, Brendan and Brian. They keep trying to pull Janie back into their mold. However, so far Janie is resisting. The Springs keep calling Janie by her birth name, Jennie, and the people Janie sees every day now at school calll her Jennie Spring instead of Janie Johnson. Janie is very torn because she feels like she is two different people. Janie herself has called her other half the bad half. She usually acts as the 'bad twin' when she is with Mr. and Mrs. Spring and her siblings. Janie Johnson is the bad person inside of her that she can't let go. Janie's older brother Stephen especially hates Jennie. He blames Jennie for ruining their lives. They had to live in the same house for twelve years because her dad would never accept a promotion, because of his daughters kidnaping. Jodie wishes that Jennie would act like a real sister instead of acting like a prisoner in their home. Jodie doesn't understand why Jennie keeps running away from them ... Jennie acts like they would strike at her or yell at her all of the time. Jodie loves her family and town, and thinks they're really neat. However, Jodie realizes that Jennie had a completely different upbringing than she did. Frank and Miranda Johnson showered Jennie with not only love, but also lots of money, clothes, and whatever Jennie wanted. Jennie is so confused about her relationships with the Springs and the Johnsons. Then Jennie realizes something that terrifies her. She doesn't have enough love to go around for both of the families. Will the Springs and the Johnsons be able to work things out and keep Jennie in both of their worlds? Or will Janie Johnson be stuck with two names for the rest of her life?

A GREAT SEQUAL

This Book is an awesome sequal to the first book, THE FACE ON THE MILK CARTON, and can not be gone without. The book contains some content that may not be appropriat for someone younger than 7th grade (I am 13). I thorughly enjoyed this book because I love suspense stories like those oh Cooney and M.H. Clark. I can not see how anybody who has read the first book can go without this book. Right now I am reading THE VOICE ON THE RADIO and will continue on to WHAT JANIE FOUND when I finish it.

A sad story of difficult choices.

"Whatever Happened to Janie" re-introduces the reader to 15 year old Janie Johnson whose life as the privileged, only child of a well-to-do Connecticut couple was shattered in the book "The Face on the Milk Carton." She discovered that the Johnson's were not her real parents, and that she had been kidnapped from her real family by the Johnson's real daughter, Hannah. Janie learned about why the Johnson's raised her as their daughter, and she learned about her real family, the Springs.For twelve years the Springs of New Jersey have agonized over the loss of their middle daughter, Jennie. Her disappearance and the uncertainties of her fate have cast a pall on what is otherwise a large, boisterous family. Then after twelves years of worry, Jennie was found- alive and very well. The Springs demand that she come home to her real family.Janie/Jennie is a total stranger to her real family. How can she adjust to this completly alien enviroment? How can she call Mr. and Mrs. Spring Mom and Dad, when she does not even know them? How can she relate to an older brother and sister who resent that she actually lived better than they did when they had feared her abused, dead, or worse at the hands of her kidnapper? How can she live without her life-long friends and her boyfriend Reeve? But she knows deep-down that she really is Jennie Spring and not Janie Johnson. In the end she must make the choice between the parents who gave birth to her and never gave up the hope of finding her, and the parents who raised her. There is no right choice here because innocent people will be hurt no matter what the decision. A poignant story, deeply reminiscent of Conrad Ricther's classic novel "The Light in the Forest," "Whatever Happened to Janie" makes for stirring reading. It's not perfect, some plotlines are not followed through, some characters underdeveloped, and the character of Reeve is a thumping bore, but it is still an outstanding story on difficult choices.
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