Mary Cooke, a young maid working for the Whitwell family looks identical to the family’s young mistress and Amanda Whitwell, a young mistress with an arrogant attitude, play the lead roles in “Amanda Miranda” written by Richard Peck. The author begins the book with Mary stumbling upon an old woman in the woods who describes to Mary that her future holds two marriages and that she will die and live again. After Mary finds her way back to the path, she had run off from, and is also the place where her parents stand to wait to carry on to Mary’s new job as a maid at the Whitwell estate. Soon after Mary arrives, she is ordered to go serve Ms. Amanda Whitwell. She gradually starts to become fixated on Mary because she looks very similar to the young mistress, sparking a plan in her mind. While Mary serves Ms. Amanda for the first time, she decides to rename Mary, Miranda. This begins Amanda’s detailed plan to end up with her true love, John Thorne, instead of the American Architect, Gregory Forrest. Amanda’s plan requires Miranda to marry John Thorne so that when Amanda is engaged to Gregory Forrest and moves to New York, John will come with Miranda since Miranda is Amanda's maid. As time goes on, Amanda succeeds in accomplishing the first two parts of her plan, but after Miranda got married to John Thorne, she realized Amanda used her and becomes very angered by the situation. Then the journey begins as Miranda and Amanda travel to New York on the Titanic, and John Thorne stays behind to accompany the mistress’s car months later on a different ship. In the beginning, Miranda and Amanda’s journey was running smoothly until The Titanic began to enter icy waters. The ship’s crowd became chaotic as they scrambled to get off the boat, but nobody knew where to find Ms. Amanda Whitwell. Miranda struggled to search for Amanda, but after learning the fate Amanda most likely suffered through, Miranda became overwhelmed. The boat sinking deeper into the Atlantic Ocean forced Miranda to jump off the ship. The jump would change her life forever turning her journey into someone else’s life.
“Amanda Miranda” written by Richard Peck, in memory of the voyage of the Titanic, shows insight into what social classes were like in 1912, the life of women in the early 1900s, and romance between people from the early 1900s expanding the knowledge readers have on these topics. Peck’s book falls into the young adult, romance, and historical fiction genres. The book, recommended for 12 to 18-year-olds includes strong emotion, tragedy, and a high level of vocabulary. When reading “Amanda Miranda” I felt intrigued to read more because the strong emotion and the history portrayed in a fictional way. Richard Peck’s portrayal of the Titanic creates a more exciting way for teenagers to learn the basics of the Titanic story.