Put Your Best Foot Forward
Now that I've written Best Foot
Forward, I get lots of questions about, well...feet: I hope not! But when I was a girl, shoe stores made me very nervous because my feet pointed inward and I needed to wear special shoes to realign them. I hated those shoes. They were big, clunky and nothing like the cool, sleek shoes my classmates wore. I would tie up those monstrous things and feel different and ugly right down to my toes. I couldn't grasp the concept that inside those special shoes were braces that were realigning my feet by turning them ever so slightly and gently outward. I'm not sure how many years I had to wear corrective shoes, but I remember when I didn't have to anymore. I was in seventh grade, I slipped into a pair of black flats, and felt released. And I took that memory of release and let it run through Best Foot Forward. Have you ever tried to walk in too-tight shoes? That's a bit of what Jenna Boller, the sixteen-year-old narrator of this novel (and Rules of the Road) is experiencing when the story opens -- life is squeezing her every which way. She's trying to deal with the emotional pain left by her absent alcoholic dad, her part-time job at Gladstone Shoes has become mind-numbingly complicated, her little sister is being a consummate brat, and then this guy, Tanner Cobb, shows up. Jenna doesn't trust him, no one does, with the possible exception of her boss, Mrs. Gladstone. Best Foot Forward is a story about connections and disconnects, about huge lies and overcoming truth, about the sheer power of forgiveness, the grace of a second chance, the goodness of a well-made pair of shoes, and the simple joy of a serious doughnut. Well, you've got to read the book to see the connections, just like you've got to try on the shoes and walk around in them for a while to see if they fit. For more about Best Foot Forward click here. |
http://www.joanbauer.com