When Roberta Israeloff opened her eighth-grade diary for the first time in thirty years, she discovered it wasn't an easy read. Its pages took her back to a critical year in the tumultuous, treacherous passages of adolescence - the time, in Carol Gilligan's words, "when girls are in danger of drowning or disappearing." Israeloff didn't drown that year - her grades didn't plummet, she didn't seriously rebel - nor did she disappear. But the metamorphosis she underwent was no less profound for being a quiet one. The ambitious, athletic, competitive "tomboy" who loved math and science was transformed into an introverted, tentative young woman who had discovered the love of words that would make her a writer but had lost the bold, unconstrained voice of her childhood. With her journal entries as a point of entry, Israeloff relives that watershed year and the turnings it marked in her sexual, emotional, and intellectual identity. Reaching back in time and forward to her present as a writer, wife, and mother, she has woven a searching account of the bittersweet realities of growing up female, one that will resonate with women of all ages.
Sometimes when searching for good books at a sale you find a really interesting book. I found Lost and Found at a library book sale and was surprised how good this book is. The writer comes across a diary she had written in 1964, when she was in the 8th grade and as she reads the diary, she compares what she considered to be important when she was 14 and what she considers important now. She compares the world of a student's dreams and goals in junior high with the world of a woman with two sons of her own. This is a book worth looking for.