13 LITTLE BLUE ENVELOPES by Maureen Johnson
Category:  Contemporary
Age Recommendation:  Grades 9+
Release Date:  9/26/06
Publisher:  HarperTeen
Reviewed by:  
Dena Landon
Rating:  5 Stars


When Virginia Blackstone (Ginny) receives the first blue envelope from her Aunt Peg in the mail, it sends her on an exciting,
funny, and sometimes poignant adventure that readers will be delighted to join.  The envelope contains $1,000 in cash, and
the instructions to pick up a package of envelopes that start Ginny on a trip around Europe, tracing the steps of her eccentric
Aunt.  The instructions are specific; no cell phones, no maps, and Ginny can only open one envelope at a time, after she's
completed each task in the previous letter.

Through the letters, Ginny learns more about what drove her Aunt to flee to Europe in pursuit of her art, and about her Aunt's
last year of life, since Aunt Peg has passed away from a brain tumor by the time the first envelope arrives--and Ginny never
got to say good-bye.  Through her adventures, Ginny learns a lot about herself.  Her own strength and ingenuity, her ability to
forgive, and that she, too, can be an interesting person.

Some of the tasks seem impossible; find the one café in all of Paris where her Aunt spent a month sleeping behind the bar and
decorating the café to pay her rent.  Others are easier, at least on the surface; find a starving artist and be his mysterious
benefactor.  Readers will both laugh at some of Ginny's mishaps and cringe at some of her mistakes as the envelopes lead her
around Europe.  

Peopled with a strong cast of supporting characters--the cute playwright she meets in London, the annoying family of
Americans with a "schedule" in Amsterdam, the crazy artist friends of her Aunt--the novel unfolds at a fast pace, while never
losing its poignancy as Ginny retraces the steps of the Aunt she loved.  Ms. Johnson has written an excellent and entertaining
novel that I highly recommend.  
13 Little Blue Envelopes
by Maureen Johnson