Orbiting Jupiter suggests that for traumatized adolescents to overcome their trauma, they need a small, supportive community that they can trust. One of the novel’s two main characters, Joseph Brook, is a 14-year-old who has experienced considerable trauma. His father, Mr. Brook, beats him. His beloved girlfriend Madeleine dies as a result of giving birth to their baby, Jupiter, whom Joseph is not allowed to see. Finally, at a juvenile detention facility called Stone Mountain, Joseph is repeatedly beaten by other boys—and, it is implied, sexually assaulted. As a result, when Joseph arrives at his first foster placement with the Hurd family, he won’t let anyone touch him or stand behind him. Yet the Hurds—a supportive and loving family—slowly win Joseph’s trust. 12-year-old Jack Hurd saves Joseph after Joseph falls through thin ice on a river and fights on Joseph’s side when bullies attack Joseph in their middle-school locker room. Mr. Hurd teaches Joseph how to milk cows, models good fatherhood for him, and searches for him persistently when he runs away in a snowstorm. Mrs. Hurd shows Joseph love and consideration. The novel suggests that the Hurds’ care has helped Joseph overcome some of his trauma when Joseph thanks Jack for “having his back” and allows Mr. Hurd to touch his back supportively without flinching—when Joseph first came to live with the Hurds, he wouldn’t let anyone stand behind him. Thus, the novel underscores the importance of a trustworthy community for adolescents healing from trauma.
Trauma and Trust ThemeTracker
Trauma and Trust Quotes in Orbiting Jupiter
They sent Joseph to Stone Mountain, even though he did what he did because the kid gave him something bad and he swallowed it. But that didn’t matter. They sent him to Stone Mountain anyway.
He won’t talk about what happened to him there. But since he left Stone Mountain, he won’t wear anything orange.
He won’t let anyone stand behind him.
He won’t let anyone touch him.
“I respect your parents, I really do. They’re trying to make a difference in the world, bringing kids like Joseph Brook into a normal family. But kids like Joseph Brook aren’t always normal, see? They act the way they do because their brains work differently. They don’t think like you and I think. So they can do things . . .”
“I always know where Jupiter is.”
“I’m alone,” he said.
“You’ve got me,” I said.
He laughed, but not a happy laugh. “Jackie, I’m a whole lifetime ahead of you,” he said.
“No one’s ever had my back before.”
When my father put his hand on Joseph’s back, Joseph didn’t even flinch.
You know what happened when Mr. Brook put his hand on Joseph’s back?
Joseph flinched.
But he went into the living room with his father anyway.