After reading When Marnie Was There last year, I looked through her bibliography to see whether another one of her stories would catch my eye. The Girl Who Ran Away was the title I was taken in by the most, and I immediately added it to my TBR. I thought it might be a story full of whimsy and about the importance of found family. Looking back on it now, I was technically hoping I'd find a very similar book to the one I had read, which it is in certain senses. After all, it's the same author and the writing style is pretty similar, but the title can be slightly misleading after reading When Marnie Was There. I feel that the original title of the novel fits better. For anyone that doesn't know, Charley is defined as "a person who plays the fool, clowns around," and Charley does quite a lot of that throughout the novel. It certainly captures the mundane through the eyes of a child. The fact that she thinks everything will be fine after running away from an aunt she thinks doesn't want her around says a lot, even if she keeps in the vicinity. As the days go by, she wanders around pretending to be different people as long as it fits her needs. She makes some connections, such as with a man called Ned, who I really liked. It's not until all the certainties around her are not so certain that all of the things she was weaving fell apart around her, and while she tries to hold them together by sheer force of will, we step outside her shoes for a bit, which was probably my favorite part. The moment the facade breaks and she gets taken in by Mrs. Denning was when I was being reminded the most about When Marnie Was There. Mrs. Denning and her son were probably my favorite characters, and I just love how they treated Charley with kindness. Very much like the Lindsays in When Marnie Was There, I so wish I could stay over at the house of the Dennings. The friendship Charley develops with John was so sweet, and I know he'll be a great teacher. As for Aunt Emm, she was very careless.