
JanieĬonfronts her parents with all the evidence she has. Mr. One day at school, Janie loses her letter forcing her to She writes a letter to the Spring family but doesn't mail it because Janie begins to write her memories down in a notebook to help her decide what to do with this situation. Of the address, she sees some kids get offīrothers and sister. She can see the Spring family with her own She goes to the library and looks up the kidnapping of Jennie Spring.Īfter reading the articles she decides that her Other family resurface and she can't get the picture of the girl on the milkĬarton off her mind. The conclusion that the memories she has is from the cult life before, and Janie is relieved to hear that and comes to Johnsons moved out of state, changed their phone number, and changed their Scared the cult was going to come back for Janie, the Hannah stuck around for a little while but ended up going back to the cult, To a man from the cult and showed up at the Hannah was a youngĬonfused girl who joined a cult in search of When she confronts her parents,ĭaughter and that she is Hannah's daughter, their granddaughter. Janie goes up in the attic to see if she can find anything. She finds a trunk tucked in theĬorner full of report cards and art projects Janie notices that there are no pictures of herĪs a baby around and when she asks about herīirth certificate, her mom says that it is misplaced, which is odd because her mother She remembers an ice cream shop, other kids,


Janie tries to put the milk carton out of her mind, but she starts to have flashbacks that sheĬalls "daymares" of a family that is not her own.

Janie is having a hard time registering all of this because her parents Mr. There was also a 1-800 number you could callįor tips.

Information on the milk carton says that Jennie Spring was kidnapped when she was three-years-old from a New Jersey mall while out with her mother, sister, and three brothers. The little girl was dressed in a white polka dot dress and her hair is up in pigtails. She noticed theĬarton it was her from when she was a little While at lunch one day in school Janie takes a sip of her friend's milk carton. Thought her life was too cookie cutter with noĪlways changing the spelling of her name, Janie Johnson is a fifteen-year-old girl who grew up inīright girl with out of control red hair and two The Face on the Milk Carton, by Caroline Cooney
