
It is September and Move-In Day at Tiffin Academy. It’s a day that would be routine, were it not for the explosive and yet smoothly managed, devastating death of a student the semester prior. As Audre Robinson, Head of School, helps the students get resettled, she cannot stifle her anxiety about how the year will unfold, how the student’s death will impact the returning students, and how the new girl admitted to fill the now open spot will blend in. She also knows school ratings are due to come out this same day. Talk about timing… As the year unfolds, she is also witness to the crazy ways in which the students – and their faculty/staff – get into and out of trouble.
This is a thoroughly entertaining novel, set in a fictional boarding school in the hinterlands of western Massachusetts. We are brought into the daily academic, social and emotional demands of these adolescents as they navigate the intense and privileged environment into which they are thrust. Who is the Queen Bee and how can we earn her good graces? How can we “get with” the cute guy/girl? Mind you, this is not restricted to the students, either. The new hires for English and History bring their own drama to the mix. It gets complicated!
I love that this is written by the author and her daughter. After her older brother chose to attend boarding school, her daughter chose to as well – and her experience and insight into the day-to-day routine, traditions, and culture of this environment provides authentic fodder for the story.
I love also how we see that despite the physical distance from their families, the students are still intertwined with and affected by their family circumstances. Their families continue to impact their mental health and ability to function (or not) in school. This is true both for those with means and those without.
This one is easy to get caught up in! Not so easy to put it down…!