The Lost and the Found
A True Story of Homelessness, Found Family, and Second Chances
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4.3 • 4 Ratings
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- $13.99
Publisher Description
A “riveting, deeply compassionate” (The New York Times) narrative of homelessness, despair, and hope.
Award-winning San Francisco Chronicle journalist Kevin Fagan has been covering homelessness for decades and has spent extensive time on the streets for his reporting. In The Lost and the Found, Fagan introduces us to Rita and Tyson, two unhoused people who were rescued by their families with the help of his own reporting, and chronicles their extraordinary struggles to pull themselves out of homelessness and addiction.
Having experienced homelessness himself, Fagan has always brought a deep understanding to his subjects and has written here more than just a story of individuals experiencing homelessness, but also a compelling look at the link between homelessness and addiction and an incisive commentary on housing and equality. Kevin Fagan writes with “the deft touch that can come only when the ego of the journalist ebbs into something far more substantial and convincing” (The New Yorker). The Lost and the Found ends with both enormous tragedy and triumph to humanize this national calamity, forever changing the way we see the unhoused.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Seeking to put a human face on the homelessness crisis, San Francisco Chronicle reporter Fagan took to his city's streets to experience the lifestyle firsthand. In this riveting account, he describes camping out on a concrete median nicknamed "Homeless Island" by those who sleep there, forming close-knit relationships with Rita, a former surfer girl now in her 50s, and Tyson, a young man suffering from undiagnosed bipolar disorder. In detailing their stories, Fagan traces the uniquely American slippery slope that leads to homelessness—a combination of high rents, precarious employment, drug addiction, lack of mental health care, a penchant for free-spiritedness verging on stubbornness, and a commitment to individual responsibility that wears away at family ties. Rita, a mother of four, always rebellious by nature, as an adult fell into a bohemian lifestyle in the Florida Keys that eventually led to drug addiction. Tyson, raised middle-class, had an erratic personality that left him floating from job to job, eventually ending up on his grandmother's couch until she passed away. In an emotional turn, Fagan reports that after publishing profiles on Rita and Tyson, he was contacted by their siblings, who were eager to help. Fagan then chronicles Rita's and Tyson's passages through rehab, halfway houses, and on to what seem to be successful new beginnings. The result is a haunting proposal that the homelessness crisis is caused above all by a startling lack of compassion in American society.