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Posts Tagged ‘Self-Growth’

Prep | Curtis Sittenfeld

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Rating: ★★★★☆
Boarding school isn’t something on which I’ve ever spent much thought. Much like our main character, Lee, I really only ever saw it in movies. But unlike Lee, I never decided it looked like a prestigious life I wanted to get myself into. But such is the idea as it strikes Lee Fiora, a teen from South Bend, Indiana, who decides she wants a better life. What she finds is a bit of a surprise that never ends.

The story takes us mostly through the past, covering her years at the prestigious Ault School, but now and again her older self will kick in with a tidbit from the present, to give us a fuller picture, or maybe just to let us know she’s there.

I suppose the most striking thing about this book is the aspect of watching this girl’s life go by as she does the same. Because never in her time at Ault does Lee Fiora truly engage. Not even when she thinks she has.

Defining Dulcie | Paul Acampora

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Rating: ★★★★½

When Dulcie’s Father accidentally kills himself, it’s a bit of a shock. When her mother decides to move them off to California, it’s more than Dulcie is prepared to take. When she finds out her mother intends to get rid of her father’s truck, she officially draws the line: she takes it and drives herself back to Connecticut.

Upon arrival, she meets not her grandfather, as expected, but a girl she’s never seen before standing in the flowers. Roxanne, who now works for Dulcie’s grandfather, knows exactly who Dulcie is, and that her grandfather has been expecting her.

The welcome isn’t as warm as she had hoped. Turns out taking off and going cross-country as a teen worries your elders. But Frank does agree to let her stay. She even gets her old job back, though as punishment she will receive no pay for the summer. She also has to call her mother. This stipulation is easier to get around: she knows when her mother is going to be at work, and always makes sure to call when she won’t be there.

Back at work as a janitor, Dulcie makes fast friends with Roxanne, whom Frank has somewhat adopted, as it seems she’s not necessarily well taken care of at home. The night Dulcie drops by with her to get fresh clothes on their way to dinner with Dulcie’s suprise-visiting mother, Dulcie finds out just how bad Roxanne’s home life is. This harsh glimpse at events causes a flurry of actions on multiple fronts, which almost lead to disaster.

In the end, Dulcie, who’s always known who she is, gains a greater understanding of relationships, friendships, love, and home. Roxanne, who’s never had it great, adopts Dulcie’s family. While perhaps no one’s ended up quite where they expected, they all know they’ve found their place.

An excellent book, worth reading again (and again).