The bestselling author of WHERE THE HEART IS returns with a heartrending tale of two children in search of a place to call home.
Lutie McFee's history has taught her to avoid attachments...to people, to places, and to almost everything. With her mother long dead and her father long gone to find his fortune in Las Vegas, 15-year-old Lutie lives in the god-forsaken town of Spearfish, South Dakota with her twelve-year-old brother, Fate, and Floy Satterfield, the 300-pound ex-girlfriend of her father. While Lutie shoplifts for kicks, Fate spends most of his time reading, watching weird TV shows and worrying about global warming and the endangerment of pandas. As if their life is not dismal enough, one day, while shopping in their local Wal-Mart, Floy keels over and the two motherless kids are suddenly faced with the choice of becoming wards of the state or hightailing it out of town in Floy's old Pontiac. Choosing the latter, they head off to Las Vegas in search of a father who has no known address, no phone number and, clearly, no interest in the kids he left behind.
MADE IN THE U.S.A. is the alternately heartbreaking and life-affirming story of two gutsy children who must discover how cruel, unfair and frightening the world is before they come to a place they can finally call home.
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Billie Letts is the author of numerous highly acclaimed short stories, screenplays and three beloved novels. A former University professor, she lives in Tulsa with her husband, Dennis.
She was almost pretty but still had the not quite finished look of a teenager-unlined skin dappled with sand-colored freckles, cheeks not quite shed of baby fat, frizzy hair too wild to be tamed by gel or spray. Her hips were as narrow as a boy's, and her feet looked too big for her tiny ankles and spindly legs.
But worst of all, she was convinced-not for the first time that day-that her breasts were never going to grow beyond the two walnut-size bumps on her chest. The best she could hope for was a Wonderbra, but she doubted even that would perform the miracle she needed.
After she got kicked off the gymnastics team, she was free to eat again-whenever, whatever, and as often as she wanted. So she began to satisfy her yearning for chili-cheese fries, chocolate malts, double-meat hamburgers, coconut cream pie, and banananut muffins slathered with warm butter.
She figured if she'd pile enough weight onto her stick-figure body, she'd eventually be able to replace her training bras with triple A's, or maybe even doubles.
But it didn't happen.
She jumped from one hundred and six pounds to one eleven and remained a size two. But most disappointing of all, the additional five pounds didn't go anywhere near the training bra, though if she used the right kind of socks for stuffing, she could pull off a size A.
One of the consolations for all the hours she spent in the gym before and after school was the shelf in her bedroom crowded with trophies, ribbons, and medals, all for her balance beam performances. Margie Holcomb, who replaced her, hadn't earned even an "also mention" certificate. Not one.
Coach Stebens had fought for her, taking on the entire school board, but like Lutie, she'd known from the beginning, the day the lie started circulating from classrooms to lockers, from the cafeteria to the parking lot, that it was a lost cause. Why? Because Superintendent Holcomb was Margie Holcomb's grandfather, who thought if Lutie lost her place on the gymnastics squad, then she-Margie-would win all those trophies. Of course, that plan didn't work out. Margie was a mediocre gymnast at best; but Lutie was the greatest ever produced not just in Spearfish, but in all of South Dakota. And many said she had a good chance of going to the Olympics. That's how her first dream of all her dreams was born.
The first time a judge placed the ribbon with a gold medal around her neck and her coach handed her a bouquet of roses, she had all she'd ever dreamed of.
Recognition!
But she'd been disqualified so many months ago and now, the summer before her junior year, the dream of competing in the Olympics had died. Not a painless death, either, not the kind that comes quietly in the night, stops the heart gently, and takes the next breath away with an unknowing comfort.
No, this death was shocking in its suddenness. Mourned. Buried. Grieved in lonely silence. Gone.
Replaced now with a more realistic goal. No longer a dream, actually, but more of a longing for the kind of attention so many other girls got seemingly without effort-popular girls with rounded hips and breasts that bounced like water balloons. But with little promise that she was destined to become the next Pamela Anderson, she thought she could be willing to settle for less.
If she could manage to give nature a boost, she would bleach her dark hair until it was the color of honey with streaks of gold. She would get more holes pierced in her ears and have a pair of kissing lips tattooed on her neck. She might even wear a nose ring.
But until she could find a way to get out of Spearfish, South Dakota, that was not likely to happen.
She took off the turtleneck, folded it into a neat square, then tucked it into the front of her underpants. She'd just rezipped her jeans when someone knocked at the dressing room door.
"This room is taken," she yelled.
"Lutie, let me in."
"I'll be out in a minute, Floy," she said, her voice edged with anger.
"Open the door."
Lutie pulled on her old sweatshirt, bloused it around her hips, then unlocked the door.
Floy Satterfield, at nearly three hundred pounds, filled the doorway. She had long ago given up on diets, counting instead on having her stomach stapled when she could put the money together. But that was a dim prospect given her four-hundred-dollar welfare check and the two extra mouths she had to feed.
"I need to go home," Floy said.
"Go? We just got here."
"I ain't feeling good."
"What's wrong now?" Lutie came down hard on the "now."
"Damned indigestion again." Floy fumbled a roll of Tums from her purse and popped two in her mouth. "You go find your brother and meet me out front."
"Well, I don't know where he is."
"He'll be where he always is. Now hurry."
Lutie waited until she could no longer hear the slap of Floy's rubber thongs before she slammed the door. She readjusted her sweatshirt, and then, satisfied no one would guess she had a turtleneck stuffed in her pants, she ran a comb through her hair and checked her mascara.
She stepped out of the fitting room carrying the ugly flannel nightgown and tweed jacket she'd used to conceal the turtleneck from the dressing room attendant.
Ignoring Floy's demand to hurry, Lutie made her way to the magazine rack, where she pulled out a couple of movie magazines, then sat cross-legged on the floor and began flipping pages. Each time she came across a picture of Brad Pitt, she ripped out the page, folded it so as to avoid creasing Brad's face, and slid it into her purse.
Fifteen minutes later, she found her brother, Fate, in the electronics department at the keyboard of a display computer, where he was trying to find out who invented shoelaces.
Though he was only eleven, he sometimes seemed to Lutie more like an old man than a child. He wore thick glasses with wire frames; worried about global warming and the endangerment of pandas; and moved like creeping Jesus. He liked plaid shirts, buttermilk, and old clocks. And he had a habit of running his fingers through his hair, which she predicted would make him bald before he finished eighth grade.
He spent most of his time reading, watching weird TV shows about lighthouses, Roman baths, prairie dogs, Jack Kerouac, and the Khmer Empire-subjects that nobody else would give two hoots about.
And he played games by himself-Trivial Pursuit, Scrabble, and Boggle.
He had no friends that she knew of-was never invited to sleepovers or slumber parties, campouts or even birthday parties. And he never invited boys to the places where he and Lutie happened to be living.
He went for long solitary walks at night and in the rain, he often talked in his sleep, but in strange languages she couldn't identify.
Lutie wouldn't be surprised if he grew up to be a shepherd.
"We gotta go," she said.
"I'm not ready yet."
"Floy's waiting on us."
"I just now got on the Net, Lutie. Some girl's been hogging it for the last half hour."
"So?"
"I need a few more minutes."
"Suit yourself. But Floy's gonna be pissed. Big-time."
As Lutie walked away, she saw several people rushing toward the front of the store, but she was too interested in getting to the cosmetics section to investigate what was going on.
A clerk restocking hand cream eyed her suspiciously as she...
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