Author: Brent Hartinger
Title: The Last Chance Texaco
Genre: romance, mystery, coming-of-age novel
Publication Info: Harper Collins. New York. 2004.
Recommended Age: 12 and older
Plot Summary: Lucy is a 15-year-old girl who lost her family to a car accident when she was only seven years old. Ever since then, she has been passed around to foster parents and group homes. She eventually ends up at Kindle Home, a run-down mansion in an upscale neighborhood. This is her last chance at a semi-normal life. If she makes any errors, she will be sent to a high-security punishment center called “Eat-Their-Young Island.” For a while she thinks this is inevitable, but she begins to really like Kindle Home, where the counselors are dedicated to the kids. Realizing that this is the closest place to a home that she has ever had, Lucy fights for the right to stay there. The only things that may get in her way are lack of funding, the threatening and deceiving alpha female, and the mysterious arsonist who is causing the neighbors to complain about the inhabitants of the home. Throughout her stay, Lucy comes to recognize her behavioral problems. With the help of the counselors and her new boyfriend, she is able to overcome her anger problems, find the arsonist, avoid “Eat-Their-Young Island,” and get placed in a nearby foster home with parents who would like to adopt her.
Personal Notes: The romance and mystery probably entice less sophisticated readers. The rest of the story is exceptional because it takes us inside a system most of us are not familiar with. I think this is a good book for students to read on an individual basis as it shows that no matter what the circumstance, kids all have similar concerns and should be treated equally. If anything, kids who have lost their families and gone through emotional trauma need more friends and should be given more attention and more chances.
Evaluation: I’ve never read a book quite like this one. I feel like it really gave me a glimpse into the life of group home kids. I have some friends who currently work at a girl’s group home, and I was able to draw a lot of connections between the novel and their experiences. This story seems to be quite realistic, especially with the bitterness and meltdowns some of the youth experience. Hartinger apparently worked at a group home up in Bellingham, Washington, which is not too far from my own hometown.
Other Comments: This book is a nominee for the Beehive Book Award, and I think it has an excellent chance of winning. Aside from the bad language used by some of the characters, the book is surprisingly clean. I would want my own children to read it so that they could see how hard life can be for some kids, and that you should never make assumptions about people by the way they act.