For the life of me I can’t remember any cutesy names for classes we took in high school. English in college was Lit Trad and the science classes for non-science majors were called names like Baby Bio. So I think it’s quite charming when my junior refers to her AP US History class as “Apush.”
Of course, junior year is a push. A push to start thinking
about college. So when I’m not perusing college websites and helicoptering my daughter
to start coming up with “the list,” I’ve been reading books about the
admissions process, both fictional and real.
Admission by Julie Buxbaum
Chloe is a senior, excited about her admission to her
dream school. Sure, she did miraculously better on the SAT than she would have
thought. Yeah, her essay was kind of meh. And maybe she shouldn’t have used
that picture where she was really tan. When the FBI arrives one morning, she realizes
all wasn’t on the up and up. Her mom, a B-list celebrity, may be headed to
jail, and now Chloe’s a pariah on social media and at school. The question
driving the action - Was Chloe complicit?
Blind Sight by Meg Howrey
Luke spends the summer in California getting to know his
biological father. When he’s not running or going to celebrity parties, (yes,
his dad is also a Hollywood actor) he’s crafting the perfect college essay.
The Admissions by Meg Mitchell Moore
Angela, a high school senior, wants nothing more than
to be accepted to her dad’s alma mater, Harvard. Her mother Nora loves the adrenaline rush of
her high-end real estate job, but doesn’t have enough hours in the day to
attend to the stress of her oldest, the orthodontia of her middle, and the
reading problems of her youngest. But slowly the secrets the parents have been
keeping are revealed and the perfect life is no longer sustainable – if it ever
was.
Unacceptable by Melissa Korn and Jennifer Levitz
If the plot of Admission (see above) seems familiar,
it’s because it comes straight from the true college admissions scandal promulgated
by Rick Singer. Korn and Levitz explain how the parents, coaches, and teens
themselves all play a role in exploiting the system. Following how the
individual strands get woven together is almost as fascinating as watching how
they unravel.
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