“I go to the shelf that holds the Lionel locomotive. I sit on the floor where I used to sit with my mother.
I try to pretend that her arms are around me.
But I can’t remember what that feels like.” (ARC 191)
Sometimes you just fall in love with a character on the first pages. I am not sure what drew me to Kate whose real name we find out later, as does she, is Krate. She has been suspended from school, she is working on her rage issues, she has no friends, and she lives in the midst of a junk store. BUT she is also tenacious, intelligent, independent, resilient, and a problem solver. She is also willing to try new things, like making a new friend or two.
Krate’s mother—a drug addict from pills prescribed by the local doctor—left her with her grandmother when her mother’s boyfriend began harassing her. Grandmother Edna, or Ed as she calls herself, lives in a junk yard and runs a junk store with junk she finds herself and is less than friendly, even to Krate. But she does have dreams for when Krate is 18 and leaves.
Krate has no friends. “I hear the voice of Mom in my head. ‘Don’t try to make friends with other kids. They won’t like you and their parents will just turn us in to children’s services.’” (ARC 126), but then Myndeelee (MD) moves in next store, and, as a lover of horror stories, she just might be strange enough to become a friend.
Karate’s mother also had no time for school, and, bullied at school before she is suspended and the next year after she returns, Krate gets the idea to go for a GED certificate and never have to attend school again.
Trying to make some money in case her mother returns for her, Krate opens a philosophy booth (like Lucy’s psychology booth but without the fear of lawsuits) and learns a lot about the people who stop by for advice. She also meets Chantelle, her mother’s best friend growing up who caused many of her mother’s drug and legal hassles, Chantelle’s son Landon who helps her prepare for the GED, her dead father’s father who wants nothing to do with her, and Old Lady Cormon, the “mean” neighbor who Ed’s cat loves and who just might give her the most help.
Readers will enjoy the different characters with whom Krate comes in contact and will learn a lot about resilience as it is faced by many of them. And Krate herself who outsmarts them all.