I love it when a book I picked up on impulse turns out to be excellent. I stumbled across Orphan Train by Christina Baker Kline in my library’s audiobook section and it turned out to be a gem.
The story begins with Molly Ayer, seventeen and about to age out of the foster home system. She’s bounced from home to home for years, rootless and trusting no one. Enforced community service brings her together with Vivian Daly, a wealthy, elderly woman who needs her enormous attic cleaned. But the attic holds all the memories of Vivian’s life, of when she was a nine-year-old orphan in the 1920s, sent west on an orphan train to find a new family.
The book is in alternating storylines, with the bulk of it on Vivian’s memories–or rather, Irish-born Niamh, who acquired new names as she was taken into different families. Niamh’s story is frequently heart-breaking, as she bounces from adult to adult who won’t or can’t take care of her. She encounters terrible callousness, occasional brutality, and a few sparks of kindness. Her perseverance and will to survive is powerful. For all the bleakness, she does eventually find safety, if not a fairy tale ending.
I loved the way Molly and Niamh/Vivian’s stories are paired. On a surface level, they’re both orphans who passed from family to family. On a deeper level, that has caused them both to struggle with trust and relationships. In Vivian we see how her tragedies and her fears caused her to accept a life that, while not unhappy, was not all that it could have been. The much younger Molly still has a chance to learn and grow and seek something different for herself–although there is a nice piece at the end suggesting that it’s not too late for Vivian to find new meaning either. Continue reading “Book Review: Orphan Train” →