Teyn Greenhood wrote:
Tell me more!
(Just a question since Al is trying to find value in what she does: Maybe have have her realize at some point that her value isn't found in what she does, but that she already has value? What you do does not determine who you are. Who you are determines what you do.)
Several themes run through the book early on. The major one is Al learning to love and trust her dad enough to "be a kid".
As the story begins Al is yet again fixing the kitchen table. She rides bikes with her friend Wilbur, she crashes and gets back on, and she is a bit selfish. As you said, she's putting value in the wrong things. Then her pain pushes her to do something really stupid. She hits her darkest moment and will lose any chance of ever being a competitor.
Al wanted to be a competitor because she thought that would make her "somebody". When those family secrets are exposed she is so far out of her ability to function that she has to quit being self-centered and to learn to honor others. How she handles that is part of the story.
While the book is Christian, and many of the characters pray and speak of "The Creator", it is more a demonstration of us as believers. We cannot comprehend God's power yet we keep saying "Hey God, I got this. Don't worry about it."