Everyone's Thinking It
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- $8.99
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- $8.99
Publisher Description
NAACP Image Award nominee!
Mean Girls meets Dear White People in this bighearted, sharp-witted UK boarding school story about family, friendship, and belonging—with a propulsive mystery at its heart.
Within the walls of Wodebury Hall, an elite boarding school in the English countryside, reputation is everything. But aspiring photographer Iyanu is more comfortable observing things safely from behind her camera.
For Iyanu’s estranged cousin, Kitan, life seems perfect. She has money, beauty, and friends like queen bee Heather. But as a Nigerian girl in a school as white and insular as Wodebury, Kitan struggles with the personal sacrifices needed to keep her place—and the protection she gets—within the exclusive popular crowd.
Then photos from Iyanu’s camera are stolen and splashed across the school the week before the Valentine’s Day Ball—each with a juicy secret written on it. With everyone’s dirty laundry suddenly out in the open, the school explodes in chaos, and the whispers accusing Iyanu of being the one behind it all start to feel like déjà vu.
Each girl is desperate to unravel the mystery of who stole the photos and why. But exposing the truth will change them all forever.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Estranged British Nigerian cousins Iyanu and Kitan are two of the few Black students attending Wodebury Hall, an English countryside boarding school. While day student Iyanu, a budding photographer, prefers to fade into the background, affluent boarder Kitan has situated herself at the top of the social food chain alongside her white besties. But Iyanu is thrust into the spotlight when photos she took of her classmates at the recent winter fair vanish from the school's darkroom and begin appearing around campus with cruel rumors and comments written on them. Resolving to clear her name, Iyanu—accompanied by her crush—set out to uncover the culprit. Among the possible perpetrators is Kitan's best friend Heather, the most popular girl in school, who "always ensures that her white skin is just bronzed enough for her to appear ‘exotic Black.' " Recalling Mean Girls, Omotoni's compulsively entertaining debut adeptly addresses topics surrounding bullying, classism, homophobia, identity, and racism via Iyanu and Kitan's alternating chapters, which piece together their fraught relationship history amid the school's current fallout in biting prose. Ages 13–up.