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The Wild Girl: The Notebooks of Ned Giles, 1932

Review

The Wild Girl: The Notebooks of Ned Giles, 1932

In 1999, elderly photographer Ned Giles explains one of his
photographs to a man attending a New York showing of Giles's
photos. The image is of a young Apache girl in a Mexican jail. The
girl, Giles says, was called "the wild girl," and was found naked
and starving in Mexico's Sierra Madre. The man purchases the
photograph, leaving Giles to remember the girl's story, and his
own, in detail. The tale, relayed by journal entries, flashbacks,
and from the point of view of several characters, is set in 1932
and begins with the girl running desperately through the arroyo
below the Sierra Madre while the cougar hunter Billy Flowers chases
her.

Seventeen-year-old Ned Giles joins a large expedition as a
photojournalist to Mexico to retrieve a kidnapped boy from the
Apaches. Ned makes friends with wealthy and outspokenly gay Tolley,
cultural anthropologist Margaret, and his own young assistant,
Jesus.

Meanwhile, Flowers chases the Apache girl again, as she has
escaped. The girl had been with her family, in a raid led by her
crazy brother-in-law, Indio Juan, when they kidnapped the rich
rancher's little boy. She remembers the kidnapping as she hides in
a cave from Flowers. When Flowers finally catches the wild girl, he
has no idea what to do with her, and so he takes her to the nearby
town jail.

In the tiny village of Bavispe, Sonora, Ned encounters the shocking
sight of the Apache girl tied to a post in front of the jail. He
arranges to bathe and clothe her. Along with his friends, he
hatches a plan that should benefit everyone, including the girl and
the kidnapped boy --- trade the girl for the kidnapped boy. A small
band consisting of Ned, the girl, an English butler, Tolley,
Margaret, Jesus, and two Indian scouts set off to accomplish the
mission. The Apaches soon capture them, and Ned finds himself in
"…another world, a world with its own sun and moon, and its
own separate race of man" --- and in imminent mortal danger.

As a tribute to Jim Fergus's talents as a storyteller, I literally
could not put down this novel, staying up until nearly dawn to
finish it. The characters are full-blooded and alive; the adventure
unfolds at a breathless pace and the descriptions are lyrical. As I
watched Ned Giles leave chilly Chicago to set off on his adventure,
my mind movie changed from black and white to warm Technicolor. The
story felt so real that I actually checked (several times!) to be
sure that the word "novel" hadn't somehow changed to "nonfiction"
on the jacket flap. This is one of the best books I've read in
years, and a story that will remain with me. Very highly
recommended.

Reviewed by Terry Miller Shannon (terryms2001@yahoo.com) on January 24, 2011

The Wild Girl: The Notebooks of Ned Giles, 1932
by Jim Fergus

  • Publication Date: April 4, 2006
  • Genres: Fiction
  • Paperback: 350 pages
  • Publisher: Hyperion
  • ISBN-10: 0786888652
  • ISBN-13: 9780786888658