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Jakarta Missing [Hardcover]

Jane Kurtz (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 3, 2001 10 and up5 and up

Dakar is scared. When her family left East Africa to spend a year or two in Cottonwood, North Dakota, Dakar's older sister, Jakarta, was adamant about staying behind. Now Jakarta is all by herself in Kenya...and she's missing.

It's terrible to go through life cringing, sure that at any minute a blow is going to come from somewhere. Dakar doesn't want to worry, but she can't help it. What if Jakarta was in the middle of a Nairobi bombing? What if Mom gets caught by hoodies and forced back into that place when Jakarta isn't even there to help? What if Dad decides to go off to save lives and is seized by some mysterious disease? If Dakar were able to do three really brave things, would that be enough to keep her family together?

Almost everything in Cottonwood, North Dakota, requires bravery from a girl who has grown up in Kenya, Ethiopia, Egypt, and Senegal. The possibility of a new friend, navigating a new school, and preparing for snow -- the first Dakar will ever see -- is the least of it. Jakarta is missing...when she's home and when she's not. And for Jakarta, Dakar will battle the universe.


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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

"It is a poor life in which there is no fear," Dakar's father likes to remind his two daughters. Before 12-year-old Dakar and her family moved to North Dakota from Kenya, her fears took the shape of charging elephants, muggings, blind beggars, bombings, and deadly cholera. In the American Midwest, she is leery of telephones, the banister in her unfamiliar two-story house, and most of all, that her older sister, Jakarta, who decided to stay back in Kenya may not be safe.

Jane Kurtz's delightful, original novel stars worrywart Dakar, a very human, very well-read, very bright girl with a richly textured imagination and fascinating fresh perspectives on Midwestern life. Dakar has reason to be a worrywart. Her mother slips into occasional periods of depression (the "hoodies" get her), and her father is perpetually preoccupied with global disease control, a job that keeps his mind far from the family, and the family on the run.

Dakar is a natural storyteller, and her new sixth-grade schoolmate Melanie's eyes grow wide with her tales of Africa. Readers, too, will revel in her imaginative landscape, rich with historical and biblical allusions she memorized in an Ethiopian boarding school, and "mysterious and unexplained things" like the Ark of the Covenant, the pyramids, and that her mom heard her grandmother's voice after she had passed away. Dakar's growing friendship with Melanie is a pleasure to behold--Melanie teaches her how to say "Help me. I'm a buttery potato on fire" in sign language, and Dakar spins tales of a continent far away. They are a fine pair, sharing secrets and dreams, even though the most exotic thing Melanie owns is a bracelet from the Wisconsin Dells, and, as she says, "The most exciting thing I've done until now was wearing socks that don't match."

Underlying all her new-kid-on-the-continent experiences is Dakar's fierce missing of Jakarta, her beautiful, smart, athletic sister. But when Jakarta is forced to return home from Africa for her own safety, the reunion is not the joyful one Dakar had anticipated. Jakarta and her father go head to head, and their mother leaves the family to help her mother's sister when she breaks her leg. When a terrible earthquake in Guatemala causes their father to leave, too, the girls are abandoned with only a credit card and the directive to be resourceful. In this fine novel, Dakar comes into her own. She learns, along with readers, that you shouldn't "get so caught up in safe that you forget to be fully alive" and that "courage and kindness and friendship and truth sent magic splinters into the universe." Heartily recommended. (Ages 10 and older) --Karin Snelson

From Publishers Weekly

Ambitious and complex, Kurtz's (Faraway Home) novel doesn't ultimately succeed, but offers a heady blend of universally relevant insight and an appreciation of the exotic. Raised in Africa, 12-year-old Dakar comes "home" with her parents to spend a year or two in North Dakota. She misses her older sister, Jakarta, who has insisted on staying behind at boarding school, and who has always been the leader. Her fears about her new environment are made all the more painful by her father's disdain for fear not even an elephant attack scares him. Bookish in a way entirely credible for a shy, expatriate child, Dakar thinks about literary and biblical characters and wishes she, too, could fashion her own quest. "What would Odysseus do?" she asks herself at one point. Kurtz captivates when describing Africa, be it the grace of the wilderness or the chaos of "Nairobbery," as Dakar calls it, and she astutely conjures adolescent dialogue and thoughts. But she overloads her plot. Jakarta is forced to join the family after her school is bombed; shortly after her return, their mom goes off to nurse a long-lost aunt (who doesn't have a telephone); and, without consulting his still-absent wife, their father rushes off to Guatemala to work with earthquake victims (no phones there, either), leaving his daughters alone for weeks. Multiple subplots involve a girls' basketball team, a painful family secret and a cook at Dakar's school who talks in aphorisms. Even with its solid beginning, the novel simply cannot sustain so much activity. Ages 10-up.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 10 and up
  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Greenwillow Books; 1st edition (April 3, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0060294019
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060294014
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.8 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #682,522 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Jane Kurtz was born in Portland, Oregon, but when she was two years old, her parents decided to move to Ethiopia, where she spent most of her childhood. She didn't live in the United States for more than a couple of year-long visits (in Boise and Pasadena) until she started college, feeling like an awkward outsider. Her books set in Ethiopia have helped her give glimpses into the land of her childhood.

Now Jane speaks about being an author at schools and conferences--in all but eleven of the United States, so far, and such places as Uganda, Nigeria, Kenya, France, Germany, Romania, England, Indonesia, Cambodia, the Philippines, and Japan. Her travels have put her in touch with all kinds of kids who are changing the world, one kid at a time, something her idealistic parents made her also want to do. Thus she helped start Ethiopia Reads (www.ethiopiareads.org), a nonprofit that is planting the first libraries for children in Ethiopia.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

16 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Don't miss Jakarta Missing!, April 13, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Jakarta Missing (Hardcover)
Jakarta Missing is an absorbing book, with a wonderful girl, Dakar, at the center of the story. Dakar is creative and smart, but also shy and scared by all of the changes in her life. All of Dakar's family and friends, including her sister Jakarta, also seemed like very real people with interesting stories to tell. Dakar's story includes fascinating descriptions of her life in different parts of Africa. And Dakar showed me how what I think of as ordinary life in the U.S. can seem very strange and new to a girl who has grown up elsewhere. Anyone who has had to deal with the difficult times of moving and changes in a family will identify with the problems Dakar faces in this book. This is a great read that I didn't want to put down!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Reflective and entertaining - Third Culture Kids will enjoy!, February 4, 2002
By 
marared (Southern California) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Jakarta Missing (Hardcover)
I really enjoyed reading Jakarta Missing. The story focuses on the life of a girl named Dakar who grew up in East Africa and who has been transplanted to North Dakota. Her recollections of her life in Africa provide insights into what it is like for a kid to live in and be a part of several cultures at once. Third Culture Kids (those growing up in a culture different from their parents' "home" culture) will definitely identify with Dakar.

The book also reflects a lot on several significant issues. Dakar and her family struggle with finding the balance between safety and living joyfully unrestrained by fear. In other words, how much of the joy of life are you willing to give up in order to feel safe? Different members of the family strike this balance in different ways and with different results. Those who struggle with taking risks will find an empathic friend in Dakar.

Dakar's family also struggles with balancing concern and responsibility for the well-being of all of humanity with concern for the more mundane but also important issues of "being there" for those you love. Is it more important to save the world or to be there to watch your kid's basketball game? A related issue is how women and girls balance taking care of others vs taking care of themselves. This issue is played out in various family members and female friends in the book, and the various characters resolved the issue differently.

There is a lot to think about in this book, but it's so engaging and fun to read that I wasn't left feeling heavy or weighed down by it. Dakar's stories about growing up in Africa are fun to read and different from your average book about a teenager in America. As a newcomer she struggles to fit in but still be herself. Anyone who has ever been in that position will be able to relate to Dakar's feelings.

Overall a great book. It kept me turning the pages long after I should have put it down and gone off to do other chores.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Dakar stood at the top of the stairs and held her breath. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
high school door, water babies
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
North Dakota, Coach Svedborg, Mother Carey, Lady Wildcats, Bear Lake, Barbry Allen, United States, Boris Godunov, False Dimitri, Great Cadona, Great-Uncle Otis, Stoney Tangawizi
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