"Sometimes it is good to have things happen to you outside of your control. There are parts of yourself you would never discover otherwise."
—Northward to the Moon, PP. 53-54
That quote encapsulates much of what Northward to the Moon is about. The plot is a series of almost random events coming together to make up the childhood of Jane and her three siblings, as life takes them on the kind of wild ride that could only happen in a story.
After the ending of My One Hundred Adventures, to which this book is a direct sequel, life does not settle down for Jane and her newly shaped family that had come together seemingly from leftover odds and ends to unexpectedly form a real family structure. Her stepfather, Ned, has now been let go from his job as a French teacher at the local school, for the very practical reason that he does not speak French. Ned always had been a wanderer before agreeing to settle down with Jane's family in the previous book and give a go at this "normal lifestyle" thing, and now his itchy feet are returning, and he takes his family off on a new adventure to unknown parts.
Adventure finds Jane, Ned and the others before very long, of course; when one is looking so hard for it, I think that adventure has no choice but to eventually acquiesce. Ned's unconventional, spread-out-across-the-country family takes center stage in the narrative as Ned gets caught up in some kind of a money scheme involving his brother, John. Following this trail takes Ned to the ranch house where his mother lives, and the two are reunited for the first time in more than twenty years. Ned's siblings come, too, and before long it's real chaos, stirred up by the cramped presence of so many eccentric family members all dropped into the same location after so many years spent completely on their own. Within the madness, though, are some lessons for Jane to come to realize, about dealing with whatever happens to oneself no matter what that may be, and understanding that so often the "bad" things that people do to us are more a misunderstanding on our part of their true intentions, rather than any purposeful motives of malfeasance. Just because we can't understand what someone is saying doesn't mean that they're not making sense.
As usual for her books, Polly Horvath weaves some moments of wisdom into the text that made me just stop and really think on a couple of occasions. You can always count on her for that, and for stories filled with wild characters and sharp humor. Readers who liked My One Hundred Adventures will want to read Northward to the Moon to find out what happened next.