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281 pages, Hardcover
First published September 10, 2019
“Now I am an efflorescent adolescent.”I’m not sure who really speaks like that, especially if they’re fourteen, but it does make for interesting reading. Ezekiel, in his justifiable bitterness, goes overboard with his snark and even some quite rude name-calling. But the heartening part is that he has people around him who are willing to dig past his surliness to find the lonely person within who needs their care and understanding. This novel makes several worthwhile points about values like trust, friendship and love.
Beth whooped in delight. “Efflorescent adolescent,” she repeated. Then her lips moved as she subvocalized it several times. “Such a cool euphemism for acne.”
“So you have to move your lips to memorize.”
“Memory is more about sound than sight, and more about kinetics than optics,” said Beth.
“I’m really sorry. I was so focused on that lost girl, and I only just now got it that we lost you a long time ago.”Too many young adult novels have parents and other adults who are either absent or oblivious, but Ezekiel’s father (a butcher, not a doctor or lawyer) is actively involved in Ezekiel’s life, communicates with him in a meaningful way, and actually joins Ezekiel and helps when events reach their crisis point. It’s almost stunning. This sensitivity and attention to interpersonal relationships and characters’ deeper motivations are another distinguishing point in Card’s works, and I generally come away feeling enriched. Lost and Found is a much different story than Ender's Game or Speaker for the Dead (still my favorite OSC novel), but you can tell they’re by the same author, and all are thought-provoking science fiction.
“Look, Ezekiel Blast, the past is like gum stuck to the bottom of your shoe. When bad stuff first happens, it’s like when the gum is sticking to everything—the road, the sidewalk. And you can’t wear that shoe into the house because it will get all involved in the carpet and the bathroom rug, but when you try to scrape it off on the edge of the sidewalk or the edge of the porch, or you try to rub it off in the grass, it won’t come off. So you have to just live with it. You walk along, your foot trying to stick with every step, but gradually as the gum gets dirtier and dries out more and more, it loses its stickiness. And eventually, without ever actually removing it, you forget the gum is there. Except maybe on a hot day the gum gets soft and a little sticky again, and you think, Oh, yeah, gum on my shoe.”
“It’s driving me crazy.”
“We’re all just a quick bike ride from crazy, Ezekiel,”said Dad. “It almost never requires any driving.”
“Dad, I carry crazy in my pocket all the time and keep taking it out to look at it...makes me wonder if it’s sanity I keep in my pocket and it only looks like crazy because I’m already bonkers.”
“As good a description of human life as I’ve ever heard,” said Father.
It was as if he had been born with this mission in life: to see that all lost things were returned.Beth is almost 14 but is in tenth grade and declares she’s “smart enough for college”. She tells Ezekiel she’s “a proportionate dwarf” and her height is referenced at every opportunity during the book, often in offensive ways. Beth is Ezekiel’s only friend.
“But that’s how scared I am, Dad. I’m just shaking. Like I’m freezing cold.”Others infuriated me with their poor taste, even if they were intended to be sarcastic. A psychology professor calls Beth Ezekiel’s “companion animal” and doesn’t seem to understand why Beth can’t see the “joke”. I almost refused to keep reading because of the flippant use of ‘crazy’ and ‘insane’, like when Ezekiel “played the crazy-kid card”. And who thought this was a good sentence:
“It’s going to be a chilly night, maybe under forty. It really is getting cold.”
"When people treat you like you’re guilty, then you feel the shame just as if you were. Shame is what other people force on you."