The Road Out vividly brings to life the stories of adolescent girls in Cincinnati's Appalachian ghetto. Their stories are little known, but they deserve to be famous. Reading The Road Out we come to understand in human terms the breadth and depth of problems confronting the lives of the unknown poor: parents too self-absorbed or drug addicted to raise their children, schools lacking resources or unable to see their students' potential, neighborhoods that offer those who live there little more than drugs and fights. The author ties the girls' histories to her own struggle to redeem herself from the poverty of circumstance and opportunity of her own Appalachian childhood. The prose is lively and page turning. For those who think education is all about raising test scores, Hicks illustrates how literature, the pleasure of reading, can provide a road out, a stimulus for wanting to learn. The girls are heartbreaking, but they're also so very alive--smart, sassy, resilient, and surprising. It's a book to savor and remember.