This Is Not a Personal Statement
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- £7.99
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- £7.99
Publisher Description
Admission meets American Panda in this propulsive, poignant YA contemporary novel about a teen who, after getting rejected from her dream college, forges her own acceptance and commits to living a lie. Perfect for fans of Mary H.K. Choi!
At sixteen, Perla is the youngest graduating senior of the hypercompetitive Monte Verde High. Praised—and not-so-quietly bashed—as “Perfect Perlie Perez,” Perla knows all the late nights, social isolation, and crushing stress will be worth it when she gets into the college of her (and her parents’) dreams: Delmont University.
Then Perla doesn’t get in, and her meticulously planned future shatters. In a panic, she forges her own acceptance letter, and next thing she knows, she’s heading to Delmont for real, acceptance or not. Soon, Perla is breaking into dorm rooms, crashing classes, and dodging questions from new friends about her lack of a student ID. Her plan? Gather on-the-ground intel to beef up her application and reapply spring semester before she’s caught.
But as her guilty conscience grows and campus security looms large, Perla starts to wonder if her plan will really succeed—and if this dream she’s worked for her entire life is something she even wants.
From rising star Tracy Badua comes a gripping, incisive tale of acceptance, self-discovery, and the infinite possibilities that await when we embrace our imperfections.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Sixteen-year-old high school senior Perla Perez has lived her life according to the high expectations of her immigrant Filipino parents and her competitive high school. When she isn't accepted into her dream university, Delmont, or any other school she applied to, her carefully curated plan for college and her reputation as "Perfect Perlie Perez" seem doomed to fall apart. But Perla prides herself in always having a plan. After successfully faking her acceptance, she heads off to Delmont anyway, determined to cover her tracks by draining her savings and secretly living on campus in an unused dorm room, and planning to reapply for Delmont's spring semester. At Delmont, she experiences a sense of freedom previously unknown, but as her lies begin to snowball, threatening to undo all of Perla's increasingly intricate double life, she finds that even her unconventional first semester at college is plagued by her family's constant pressure and her seemingly inescapable feelings of loneliness. Attentively examining themes of guilt and outside pressures with cultural nuance and plenty of good-humored scheming, Badua (Freddie vs. the Family Curse) cultivates a high-stakes narrative of self-discovery and the dangers in pursuing perfection. Ages 13–up.