Imagine a modern-day retelling of Mark Twain's classic The Adventures
of Huckleberry Finn, with a teenage girl and a very pregnant young
Mexican as the main characters. That's the gist of Matthew Olshan's
brilliant literary debut, Finn: A Novel. The book's narrator is Chloe
Wilder, a quiet girl, part tomboy, part survivor. Rescued from a
murderous life with her mother, Chloe lives with her grandparents in the
cocoon of a quiet, middle-class neighborhood. For the first time in her
life, things are steady, safe--and stifling. Enter Silvia Morales, the
grandparents' maid. Silvia is an illegal immigrant, but that's not her
only secret: She's also pregnant, a transgression that gets her kicked
out of the house. Not long after, Chloe is torn from her quiet life too,
and forced to live on the run. While Finn is about Chloe and Silvia's
comic mishaps--and their brushes with real danger--on the road, it's
also a dark portrait of modern America, where smug suburbanites live
minutes away from the wilderness of inner cities, and once-mighty rivers
meander under superhighways.