What Parents Should Know
Parents need to know that younger teen girls who are into
all of the "popular girl" series books will want to read this,
but it will slap them with all the same raw, adult themes that
make these books guilty pleasures. Teens drink a lot, smoke --
and even snort cocaine. One protagonist loses her virginity in
the school library. Another has an eating disorder. There is
swearing, lots of label name-dropping -- and even some pretty
disturbing hazing.
Families can talk about other movies and books about boarding school kids. What is it about the idea of kids living at school that intrigues us so much? What are some of the similarities you see between this book and other media in the genre (think: cliques, harassment, class differences, etc.)? How realistic are these portrayals?
Common Sense Media Review
You've heard the story before: Two opposites form an
unlikely friendship at a posh boarding school.
What makes this story unique is that its characters -- one a lively loud-mouthed Long Islander, the other an old-money field hockey star from Connecticut -- seem very vivid -- and vulnerable. They both have deep family issues, and encounter new problems as well: Nikki falls for a bad boy, who gets expelled, and Laine's eating disorder threatens her field hockey scholarship -- and future college career.
Their prep school setting feels equally real. It's complete with magical adjoining woods, cafeteria politics -- and, of course, dorm hazing (in one scene, the alpha girls line up the dorm residents to circle their flaws). The authors went to boarding school together, and it's clear that they loved it, warts and all.
Don't be fooled by the book's cheap packaging or its formulaic set-up. Readers will be truly moved by both girls' stories -- and appreciate their growing friendship.
Common Sense Media is a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing information to help parents make media and entertainment choices for their families.



