Many
novels contain events, scenes and people taken from the author’s life. “Write
what you know” is a familiar dictum from editors and critics, and most writers,
even those who write fantasy and science fiction, take that advice to heart.
But
it’s not often that one reads an introduction to a novel an admission that the
author is two of the main characters of the story. Right at the beginning of The
Annie Project, Joanne Norton makes that statement: “I am two of the
main characters. My official name is Carolyn Joanne, although I’ve been only
called Joanne since birth. So, in the book, I am ‘Cary’ and ‘Annie.’”
What
that statement does, of course, is tell the reader that while this is a novel,
it is also something of a memoir, something of an autobiography, and, in Norton’s
hands, something of a testimony.
But
most of all, The Annie Project is a
story, a big story, the story of how an elderly woman’s concern about a young
girl next door leads to the redemption of a family.
Cary
Nolan is a recent widow, a former missionary, a mother and a grandmother. After
her husband’s death, she moves to a small town called Newton to be closer to
her children. And next door is a mother who drinks herself in an alcoholic
stupor, a teenaged boy constantly in trouble with the law, and a 12-year-old girl
named Annie who’s angry at the world. They’ve been abandoned by the father.
Norton on a mission trip in Uganda |
Cary
looks at Annie, and Cary sees a lot of herself. Perhaps too much of herself.
So
Cary decides to do something. She has enough wisdom to know that reaching out
to Annie won’t be an all-or-nothing proposition, but more of a little bit here
and a little bit there. And it won’t be all victories.
Things
happen in The Annie Project. Lots of
things. Annie’s mother disappears. The father returns. Annie’s brother gets
into more trouble. Cary goes on a short-term mission trip to Uganda (and, I
suspect, an event in the novel that is clearly autobiographical).
Norton
writes with passion. She is passionate about Annie’s story, because she is
passionate about her own story. She knows the meaning of grace, both receiving
and giving it. She’s passionate about sharing the grace she’s been given.
And
she knows that while this may be Annie’s/Cary’s/Joanne’s story, it is also our
story.