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Jan Walker (An Inmate's Daughter)

Now Available: Questions and Activities for reading groups and classroom use

This two page (one sheet) insert in the back of each book will make An Inmate’s Daughter by Jan Walker, even more valuable for middle-grade and high-school study. We also recommend this as a reading group guide. The guide is free and may be obtained by e-mailing Raven Publishing and requesting a free copy.

Jan Walker

Jan Walker Biography


Jan Walker taught parenting and family relationships classes to adult felons for eighteen years, and used her background and success with incarcerated dads to create a middle-grade novel, An Inmate's Daughter. The book gives readers a realistic look at what children experience when a parent is in prison. It shows what inmate parents can accomplish when they choose to spend their time inside prison learning about themselves and their children.

Jan is the author of Parenting From a Distance, Your Rights and Responsibilities, in use with incarcerated parents since 1987 and reissued in December 2005. Another of her books, Dancing to the Concertina’s Tune: A prison teacher’s memoir, offers readers an honest look at the rhythms of living and working inside both female and male prisons. Through Jan’s eyes, readers see her students as human beings struggling to survive behind bars.

Jan lives in Gig Harbor, Washington, where she is the current president of a writers’ association dedicated to fostering literacy and the writing craft for youth and adults. She weaves forests, mountains, seas and a sense of place into adult and young adult fiction and memoir.

Jan Walker is currently the president of the Peninsula Writers' Association: (www.PeninsulaWritersAssociation.org)

The members of Peninsula Writers' Association are committed to developing the craft of writing and fostering literacy in our community. Their goals are to educate and assist writers of all ages by offering workshops, lectures and readings throughout the year. Ms. Walker also speaks and presents at writers' conferences and workshops. (you may want to contact her personally through her web site at: www.janwalker-writer.com to check out her schedule!)

Walker is currently working on a Depression era novel, and a family memoir that includes history of the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard.

An Inmate's Daughter
by Jan Walker

Category: JUVENILE FICTION/Intermediate
ETHNIC/Multicultural
TOPICAL /Prison & Family life/ Soccer
Approximately 180 pages with illustrations
Trim Size: 5 1/4 x 7 3/4
Soft cover
Price $9.00
ISBN: 0-9714161-9-2
Publication Date: Spring 2006

On the first day of summer vacation between seventh and eighth grade, Jenna MacDonald does the dumbest thing ever. She jumps from the McNeil Island boat dock into the water to save a little girl from drowning. McNeil Island is home to a prison in the middle of Puget Sound. It’s where Jenna’s dad lives, and she is there with her mother, brother, and grandparents for a visit.

Her dad recently transferred to the island, and Jenna, her mother and brother transferred too, to live nearby with Jenna’s grandparents. Jenna has been trying to join the Snoops, her school’s in-group. They’re racially mixed. She’s part Native American. Though they’re really looking for someone who is Hispanic, they are evaluating her.

Jenna isn’t permitted to tell her new friends that her dad is in prison. It’s her mother’s rule. Prison reflects on wives and children. Keeping the fact of prison secret becomes more difficult when the newspaper runs a story about a Good Samaritan rescue at the McNeil Island Corrections Center. No names are mentioned, but Jenna’s mother is furious. Jenna stays out of her mother’s way and collects the news clippings about the incident. She writes in her journal about her wish to tell the truth.

Just as Jenna is forming a friendship with one of The Snoops, another learns about her dad and prison by snooping in Jenna’s room. The group leaders vote to exclude Jenna, but the forming friendship survives, and a new one begins when the former boyfriend of a Snoops leader reveals his real dad is in prison too.

An Inmate's Daughter is a fictional account of the reality faced by over 2 million American children with a parent in prison or jail. The children are doing time too.



Author sites:  Janet Muirhead Hill | Juliana Hutchings | Jan Walker | Jan Young
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