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"When it comes to family, Annie is in the losers bracket. While her foster parents are great (mostly), her birth family would not have been her first pick. And no matter how many times Annie tries to write them out of her life, she always gets sucked back into their drama. Love is like that. But when a family argument breaks out at Annie's swim meet and her nephew goes missing, Annie might be the only one who can get him back. With help from her friends, her foster brother, and her social show more service worker, Annie puts the pieces of the puzzle together, determined to find her nephew and finally get him into a safe home."-- show less

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Annie Boots is a gifted athlete. She is also a foster kid, one of the lucky ones with a stable, long-term placement. But she can't give up on her extremely disfunctional bio family, to the point of repeatedly sabotaging her athletic efforts because it might mean seeing her mother or sister more often. On the rare occasions that that works, things always go horribly wrong. Annie (and the other characters) is well-written and realistic, but her self-destructive behaviour made her hard for me to sympathize properly.

This is not a bad book. It may be a necessary one. But I didn't find it nearly as moving as most of Crutcher's other books.
Chris Crutcher's social work background is obvious in this book, which is centered around a girl in long-term foster care with strong, if not healthy, ties to her biological family. Annie is a star basketball player who has been fortunate to be placed in a comfortably-off and caring long-term foster placement. One problem is that she can't let go of caring about her substance abusing and irresponsible mother and sister, and her young nephew, and whenever she sees them it's hard to recover. Another problem is that her foster father cares too much, specifically about her athletic achievements, and is therefore demanding and critical and clueless about her emotional state. On the positive side, Annie's foster mother and brother do show more understand her, and so do her social worker, therapist, best friend, and her mother's boyfriend. When Annie's nephew goes missing, all the problems come to the fore, but so does Annie's support system. At first it was disconcerting for Crutcher to have written in first person from a girl's point of view, but the path of the story is engaging enough so that ultimately it all works. show less
½

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16+ Works 9,082 Members
Chris Crutcher is the critically acclaimed author of seven young adult novels and a collection of short stories, all of which were selected as ALA Best Books for Young Adults. Drawing on his experience as a family therapist and child protection specialist, Crutcher writes honestly about real issues facing teenagers today: making it through school, show more competing in sports, handling rejection and failure, dealing with parents. Chris Crutcher has won two lifetime achievement awards for his work: the Margaret A. Edwards Award for Outstanding Literature for Young Adults, and the ALAN Award for a Significant Contribution to Adolescent Literature. He lives in Spokane, Washington show less

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Genres
Fiction and Literature, Teen, Young Adult
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PZ7 .C89 .LLanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
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(3.81)
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English
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Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
12
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2