The story is told using present-tense verbs, so readers will
feel like the events are happening right then. The book opens with background
information describing Julianne’s formative years. This section is important as
it shows where she acquired most of her survival knowledge. “Normal” teenagers
would probably perish in the Amazon jungle. Julianne’s parents study
Amazonian flora and fauna, and they built a home in the jungle to support their
work. Julianne spends most of her formative years in the Amazon, and her father
teaches her about plants she can eat and dangers she should avoid. Following
the water is an important survival skill he shares, since moving water will
eventually lead to humans.
Sidebars are found in each chapter, and they present
information relevant to Julianne’s situation. The first question readers will
have is how a girl can still be alive after falling into a dense jungle from
two miles in the sky. The book shares a scientific explanation. Hungry
predators are a constant danger, so the book offers information about piranhas,
jaguars, caimans, giant spiders, and various insects, including the screwworm
fly. There’s even a part about the harmful effects of eating too much after
starving for days. Julianne suffers from many severe injuries, and readers might wonder
why she doesn’t succumb to the pain. The book provides information on how
the human body responds to severe trauma and stressful situations. Some of the
effects aren’t felt until several years pass. Pages at the end of the book
share additional material related to the Amazon and how to become a scientist.
What didn’t work as well:
For the most part, middle-grade readers can appreciate Julianne’s
ordeals. Some of the descriptions are graphic, especially when screwworm flies
lay eggs in her open wounds. Julianne faces harrowing dangers in the jungle,
but there’s not a moment when readers will feel her death is imminent. That’s
probably due to her superior knowledge of survival.
The final verdict:
The book augments Julianne’s dramatic adventure with facts to describe
jungle hazards and the science of her survival. The tale is even more amazing
when readers understand that everything described happened to a real, living teenager.
I recommend you try the book for yourself.

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