Kirkus Reviews QR Code
THE LOST AND THE FOUND by Kevin Fagan Kirkus Star

THE LOST AND THE FOUND

A True Story of Homelessness, Found Family, and Second Chances

by Kevin Fagan

Pub Date: Feb. 11th, 2025
ISBN: 9781668017111
Publisher: One Signal/Atria

Putting a face on people who don’t have homes.

The homeless epidemic afflicts every American city, and yet San Francisco has often been designated by the national news media as the homeless capital of America. After all, as veteran San Francisco Chronicle reporter Kevin Fagan writes, “If you have to be homeless, there’s no better place than San Francisco. This is where the booze and dope are plentiful, the cops are lax, and the homeless culture is so widespread you can disappear into it.” With compassion, an eye for detail, and an instinct for the human stories behind the statistics, Fagan gives voice to the often-anonymous individuals propelled on downward spirals that take them from suburbia and middle-class comforts to mean streets rife with panhandling, AIDS, fentanyl, disease, and death. When needed, Fagan brings in facts: 35% of San Francisco’s unhoused are Black, yet they make up only 6% of the population. Born and raised in the Bay Area and briefly homeless himself, Fagan knows what it’s like to be without a bed at the end of the day. In his book, he focuses on a traffic island that’s dubbed “Homeless Island.” Perched between the Tenderloin and Mission districts, it’s not far from City Hall. Fagan contrasts Homeless Island with the beauty and wealth of a city that has long prided itself on its caring—but that often doesn’t want to acknowledge the waves of refugees from elsewhere who arrive without resources and must find a space on a sidewalk or under a bridge. “The Shame of the City,” a Chronicle series on homelessness that Fagan produced, helped inspire California Gov. Gavin Newsom to create “Homeward Bound,” a program that reunites the unhoused with family and friends. Like that series, this book is powerful, offering a humanizing and hopeful portrait of an abiding problem.

A rare look at citizens often denied their dignity.