Prep
by Curtis Sittenfeld

    PREP by Curtis Sittenfeld
    Category:  Contemporary
    Age Recommendation:  Grades 9+
    Release Date:  11/22/05
    Publisher:  Random House
    Reviewed by:  Amanda Dissinger
    Rating:  5 Stars


    Walking through the typical young adult section of a bookstore, there are usually five, maybe even ten, books
    about a teenage girl, perhaps from a small town, who transfers from that wee little town to a prep school.

    Typically, this prep school is in Connecticut, or Massachusetts. Typically, the girl starts out struggling, tries to fit
    in with the popular crowd, misses her hometown, faces many moral problems, and meets a handsome, promising
    young prep school boy who shows her the ways of love. Seeing the plot of Curtis Sittenfeld’s PREP for the first
    time, a normal reader would write it off as being another cliché prep school book.

    There’s where they’d be wrong.

    PREP is a searing, creative look at the life of one small-town girl, Lee Fiora, who comes from her home in South
    Bend, Indiana, to Ault, a prep school in Massachusetts. Exposed to many new kinds of ideas and people, Lee
    stands on the thin line between misery and naivety as she explores all that her new life has to offer.

    Sittenfeld writes about teen angst in a way that doesn’t try to make it seem petty or unimportant; she embraces
    it, and fully understands it. This is what sets the book apart from many other titles. Wallowing in loneliness and
    heartbreak, the reader feels as if Lee is actually a part of them, and that they are experiencing all of the awkward
    and horrible events that are occurring in the story.

    Lee acts as an opposite-gender Holden Caulfield, the main male character in J.D. Salinger’s classic novel THE
    CATCHER IN THE RYE. She takes everything with a grain of salt and a little bit of dry humor while making
    wise observations well beyond her years. PREP is bound to become a classic, for its brutally honest
    interpretation of a time that plagues all of us: high school.