A lifetime of reading Newbery Medalist Jerry Spinelli (Maniac Magee, 1991) has led me to the conviction that anything he pens is worth engaging with. There's a magic to his writing I've never seen matched, though some have achieved glimmers of it. Aged into his seventies, years after peak popularity, Mr. Spinelli released The Warden's Daughter in 2017, and by then I knew enough to treat every new work from him as an unexpected gift, for even the great children's authors do not live forever. This book spirits us back to 1959 small-town Pennsylvania, where twelve-year-old Cammie O'Reilly lives with her widowed father. He is the warden of Hancock County Prison, and the two live in an apartment adjoining the facility. What is it like for a preteen girl who spends every day near some of the most notorious inmates in the U.S.? You'll get an answer in these pages.
Cammie doesn't look much like a young woman yet, though Reggie Weinstein, her best friend, can easily pass as in her late teens. Reggie dreams of dancing on the television program American Bandstand hosted by Dick Clark, but Cammie's dream is to have what she hasn't since infancy: a mother. Cammie's mother died saving her from a motor vehicle accident when Cammie was a baby, and most of her life she hasn't really felt the absence. As adolescence draws near, the loss of her mother begins to weigh, and Cammie resolves to do something about it. She'll convince Eloda Pupko, a prison trustee who works as housekeeper for the O'Reilly apartment, to act as her mother. Cammie presents this overture without ever saying what she wants, and Eloda doesn't pick up on her hints. Does the plan have any chance of success?
Summer of '59 is a flash of excitement, drama, and boredom, somehow all at once. Cammie resents Eloda's unspoken refusal to step into the role as her mother. Many of the ladies in prison have years remaining on their sentences, and though Cammie's father won't disclose Eloda's crime or how much time remains for her, Cammie is aware that going to prison doesn't brighten one's future. That summer the neighborhood is enthralled by the arrival of Marvin Edward Baker, a stone-faced child murderer who becomes a sort of celebrity at Hancock County Prison. Reggie is starstruck, but Cammie is more impressed by Boo Boo Dunbar, a sassy shoplifter who shows matronly affection for Cammie. If only Eloda would fuss over her as Boo Boo does every day.
"There was no glow I could not darken, no sweet I could not sour."
—The Warden's Daughter, P. 133
Will Reggie ever make it onto American Bandstand? Can Cammie soften Eloda to herself as a surrogate daughter? Meeting Danny Lapella, a baseball kid smitten with Cammie, and young Andrew Strong, who turns into the closest thing Cammie ever had to a brother, are interesting diversions as she winds her way toward the new school year, but not even drama or tragedy can take her eyes off the prize. She's convinced Eloda can fill the hole her mother left, but Cammie isn't the only one being coy in their relationship. Eloda has her own secrets, and perhaps in the end she will find a way to help Cammie make peace with what she lost in that accident more than a decade ago.
"Do not allow your future to be plundered by the past—neither the bad nor even the good of it."
—The Warden's Daughter, PP. 49-50
Under Jerry Spinelli's masterful hand The Warden's Daughter has special moments, but is too scattered to be a piece of unified narrative craftsmanship. I couldn't quite identify the ride I was taking, and that kept me from fully investing. Cammie is a dour girl with only one real friend, so a lot of the story takes place in her head, putting the world at a distance. The epilogues are a strong attempt to up the emotion factor, but I can't say they get all the way there, which is why I'm rating the book two and a half stars. I won't place it anywhere near the elite class of the author's Stargirl, Wringer, Crash, or Jake and Lily, but The Warden's Daughter brings some fond moments, and I'm grateful for everything we get from Jerry Spinelli.