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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: patriarchy, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks



Frankie has always been underestimated by people. From her family calling her "Bunny Rabbit", to her virtual invisibility on campus her first year at Alabaster, Frankie is seen as less than. Less than her big sister Zada. Less than the boys on campus who take up too much space. Not even capable of wandering into town on her own at the Jersey shore.

And then she falls off her bike.

Suddenly, gorgeous senior Matthew Livingstone is Frankie's boyfriend. His friends are her friends and she loves all of the attention that she gets. But she doesn't like the fact that Matthew seems to be at Alessandro's (Alpha) beck and call. So one day when Matthew dumps her for the boys, Frankie engages in some espionage. Turns out that the old boy network that her dad is always going on about is still alive and well at Alabaster. Frankie is certain that she could do it better.

Since this is still in arc format, I am not going to give too much away, other than to say that I love this book. Boarding school, feminist sensibilities, and smart characters. From wordplay to the introduction of other authors and social theory, from discussions of class to that of following the crowd and the rules, there is so much going on in this book. Frankie is an amazing girl, and I think that E. Lockhart has outdone herself. Every student at our school who has read this is raving about it. The readers who love Waiting for Alaska will fall for this title as well.

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2. Analyzing a book cover

I ran across this interesting example of what went into a book cover, namely Michael Crichton's Next. Part of it says, "on every big cover you have a million opinions. You ahve the editor and the editor-in-chief and the publisher, and you show it to the author and he's OK with it. ... The jacket has to have the blessing of key store accounts, espcially that of Sesalee Hensley" the fiction buyer for Barnes and& Noble.

[Full disclosure: It's kind of weird and scary to think that one person is having that much impact on what America sees. I was also reading about how the Advanced Reading Copies of a well-known author were released with one title, which was changed when a buyer (possibly the same person) didn't like it.]

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