"I had just turned fourteen, it was 1975, and my ideas about home, furniture, and cleanliness ran straight into me like an umbilical cord from my mother." In the upper-crust Baltimore neighborhood of Roland Park, Mary Jane's emotionally distant father thanks God every night at the dinner table for giving him an obedient child. Her world is exceedingly neat and regimented, until she begins working as a summer nanny for the Cone family down the street. This is the summer that will change everything for the protagonist of Jessica Anya Blau's Mary Jane.
Mary Jane's first-person narration and extremely limited experience of the world make this story both poignant and tremendously funny. While her own family oozes Stepford-style 1950s values, the Cones are consistently barefoot and scantily clad, and their home is a shock. "I'd never before been in a house where every space was crammed with things to look at or think about." Mary Jane's charge, Izzy Cone, is a completely delightful five-year-old girl with untamed curls, copious energy and few boundaries. And then Dr. Cone (a psychiatrist) moves a patient and his wife into the guest quarters. They turn out to be a heroin-addicted rock star and a movie star. Mary Jane finds herself newly enfolded in boundless affection, acceptance, good humor and nonstop (mostly harmless) shenanigans. How will she reconcile this wild, disruptive, noisy new world with the life she's known?
Mary Jane is unendingly charming and fun. Blau's appealingly naïve narrator is at her best when she wonders at the colorful world that emerges in this enchanting novel about personal growth and changing times. --Julia Kastner, librarian and blogger at pagesofjulia

