Jennifer Armstrong

For other people named Jennifer Armstrong, see Jennifer Armstrong (disambiguation).

Jennifer Mary Armstrong (born May 19, 1961)[1] is an American children's writer known for both fiction and non-fiction. She was born in Waltham, Massachusetts,[1] grew up outside of New York City, and now lives in Saratoga Springs, New York.[2] She was formerly married to the author James Howard Kunstler.

As an author who has utilized multiple types of narrative structures, Armstrong believes that

A short story is only one of many narrative structures. We create narrative with jokes, ballads, tales, novels, poems, anecdotes, etc... While there are many satisfactions to be found in the conventional beginning-middle-end narrative that is common in short fiction for kids, I believe young readers can respond to many other forms of short narrative.[3]

After 9/11, she wrote that books can be the "enemy of violent zealotry" and work against chaos and fear.[4]

Books

Mairhe Mehan

Intended for middle-school-aged readers, Armstrong wrote this series of five books about an Irish family living in Swampoodle, Washington, D.C. during the Civil War. The family- composed of a drunken father, his son- a bricklayer during the construction of the Capitol building- and his daughter Mairhe, who works at the Shinny, the local pub. There, Mairhe hears patrons discussing the war; though she believes the Irish should not take sides, others see it as "a means to free slaves who will then push them even further down the economic scale in the competitive job market."[5] Her brother Mike joins the Union army, causing her to contemplate the reasoning of Irish loyalty to either side of the war. While working she meets Walt Whitman, who acts as a symbolic unifier to her conflicting feelings by showing her how to open up to new people. In the afterword to Becoming Mary Mehan, Armstrong states that after finishing The Dreams of Mairhe Mehan, she took a train to northern Canada with only one book: a collection of essays about the pioneering naturalists of North America. With that she received the inspiration for the plot of Mary Mehan Awake.[6] Although historically "well-researched," in one book Armstrong misplaced the building of the Capitol in the 1860s despite its completion by 1830. However, she accurately portrays Whitman in Brooklyn on the day after Lincoln's funeral.[5] The Dreams of Mairhe Mehan was listed on the 1998 Young Adult Choices list as a result of being voted in the top 30 by students in American schools grades 7-12.[7]

Shipwreck at the Bottom of the World

This nonfiction narrative details the 1914-1916 expedition to Antarctica led by Sir Ernest Shackleton on the Endurance. His vessel was shipwrecked and frozen on ice for 10 months until pressure finally crushed it. The crew camped on the ice for five months before crossing the open in two open boats to South Georgia Island. The book contains more than 40 vintage photographs taken during the expedition.[8] For her writing and research Armstrong was selected as an Orbis Pictus Award winner.[9]

Shattered: Stores of Children and War

Armstrong edited and contributed one piece ("Witness") to this collection, which features works by Ibtisam Barakat, Joseph Bruchac, Lisa Rowe Fraustino, Marijane Meaker, David Lubar, Lois Metzger, Gloria D. Miklowitz, Dian Curtis Regan, Graham Salisbury, Marilyn Singer, and Suzanne Fisher Staples. It was selected by Chris Crowe as one of fifty short story collections worth reading.[10]

Fire-Us Trilogy

The Fire-Us Trilogy (Book 1: The Kindling, Book 2: Keepers of the Flame, and Book 3: The Kiln) is a series of post-apocalyptic young adult fiction by Jennifer Armstrong and Nancy Butcher. The series begins in 2007, five years after a plague of unknown origin has killed the vast majority of the human population. The plot concerns the family, a group of orphan children living in the small fictional town of Lazarus, Florida. The older children, now approaching adolescence, attempt to emulate the behavior of the "first families" to which they belonged before the plague. Armstrong and Butcher depict the children as traumatized and ill-equipped to handle the world around them, the youngest being barely more than toddlers at the time of the "Fire-Us," the children's name for the contagion. Teacher takes on the responsibility of educating the younger children, Baby, Doll, Teddy Bear (her brother) and Action Figure (Hunter's brother). Teacher compulsively collects information concerning the Fire-Us and the collapsed civilization in The Book, a scrap book which she adds to in a trancelike state. In reality, The Book seems to be a meaningless collection of advertisements, half-remembered news segments, and bits of instruction manuals. Fourteen-year-old Mommy acts as a maternal figure to the younger children, attempting to feed them a nutritious diet. She refuses to leave the house, and suffers from extreme agoraphobia. Both Mommy and Teacher are frequently frustrated by Action Figure, who frequently skips lessons and meals to go out scavenging with Hunter, an older boy- also fourteen- who searches Lazarus for rapidly dwindling food.

As the family comes to grips with their increasingly desperate situation, they encounter a disturbed older boy who wanders into Lazarus dragging a mannequin on his back. The family call him Angerman, a mispronunciation of "anchorman", because of his tendency to give semi-coherent monologues in the style of a newscaster. The "news" often ends with Angerman succumbing to his own frustration at not being able to remember the events he is "reporting". Angerman's thought process is constantly interrupted by the hostile commentary of Bad Guy, the boy's name for the mannequin he carries with him. Angerman blames Bad Guy for the Fire-Us in particular, and frequently attacks the mannequin to "shut him up", although Angerman is the only one who hears Bad Guy "talking". Concurrent with Angerman's arrival is the discovery of Puppy and Kitty, two small children who speak only in animal noises. These children amaze the Family, as they clearly were born after the Fire-us, though all the adults were supposedly killed.

After hearing one of Angerman's "reports", the family hatches a plan to travel to Washington D.C. to find the President.[11] On their way they encounter the Keepers, a group of religious fundamentalist adults living in an abandoned mall, and a helpful enclave of elderly women living in a retirement community. The Keepers, who name themselves after Bible verses, believe the Fire-us was a miracle sent to cleanse the Earth and allow the chosen ones to start afresh. An adolescent girl, Cory- named after a verse in Corinthians- has grown disillusioned with the movement after her older sister was "chosen" to become one of the leader's companions, and she joins the Family as they head to Camp David, where the President supposedly is, the Keepers hot on their trail.

At Camp David, it is revealed that the President is none other than the leader of the Keepers, and it was he who unleashed the original Fire-us in order to create the "Second Coming" for God, while protecting himself and his followers in a bunker. Because all of the children from Lazarus are pre-pubescent at the time the virus was first released, they were exempt from the fictional disease which affects only those who produce sexual hormones. The President has since been bringing young girls to his camp in an attempt to recreate a new race all descended from him, subjecting the children born to these to girls to a trial by fire that few survive.[12]

Puppy and Kitty (who are revealed to be the children of Cory's sister), are captured and are going to be submitted to this trial. Before they can, Angerman kidnaps the President and holds him at gunpoint, despite the fact that the President is holding another vial of the Fire-us, which, if broken, could destroy the world again. Angerman is mad with grief, having realized that the President is in fact his father, and yet left himself, his brother, Sam, and his mother to die while he saved his followers. In the end, Cory manages to take the gun and lock herself and the President in one of the air-tight bunkers as the vial breaks, saving the world (it is implied she also shoots him and herself, rather than die of the disease). The series ends on a note of hope, as the family decides to head to Washington state in search of a new home and other survivors.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Armstrong, Jennifer". Revised August 8, 2013. The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (sf-encyclopedia.com). Retrieved 2014-09-24. Entry by 'JC', John Clute.
  2. "Jennifer Armstrong" (PDF).
  3. Marilyn Singer (Fall 2000). "What is a Short Story?" 28 (1). The Alan Review.
  4. Jennifer Armstrong (2003). "Narrative and Violence" (PDF) 79 (2). Horn Book Magazine. Retrieved 11 March 2012. Cited in Hauschildt, Patricia M. "Worlds of Terrorism: Learning through Young Adult Literature." The Alan Review 33.3 (Summer 2006): 18–19
  5. 1 2 Joann P. Krieg (Spring 2001). "Armstrong, Jennifer. The Dreams of Mairhe Mehan and Mary Mehan Awake [review]" 18 (4). Walt Whitman Quarterly Review: 198–199. ISSN 0737-0679. Retrieved 11 March 2012.
  6. Jennifer Armstrong (2002). Becoming Mary Mehan. Random House Digital, Inc.
  7. "Young Adults' Choices for 1998" 42 (3). Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy. November 1998: 229. ISSN 1081-3004. Retrieved 11 March 2012.
  8. Claudia Anne Katz, Karen Boran, Timothy J. Braun, Mary J. Massie, and Sue Ann Kuby (2003). "The Importance of Being with Sir Ernest Shackleton at the Bottom of the World" 47. Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy.
  9. Elaine M. Aoki. "The Significance of Topics of Orbis Pictus Award-Winning Books: The Timelessness of Presentation" (PDF). Seattle, Washington: Bush School. p. 45.
  10. Chris Crowe (March 2003). "Young Adult Literature: Can Reading Help?" (PDF) 92 (4). English Journal.
  11. Rachelle Lasky Bilz (2004). Life is tough: guys, growing up, and young adult literature. Scarecrow Press.
  12. Lucy Schall (2007). Booktalks and Beyond: Promoting Great Genre Reads to Teens. Greenwood Publishing Group.

External links

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