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La Petite Fadette by George Sand
La Petite Fadette by George Sand








The finely drawn characters capture readers’ attention in this debut.Īutumn and Phineas, nicknamed Finny, were born a week apart their mothers are still best friends. But, like too many adults writing fiction for teens, they try too hard to be hilariously hip, and it shows. Authors Baker and Hastie tell a jovial-enough yarn about an innocent-enough racial, gender, and age ventriloquism act that goes humiliatingly awry. Rachel helps out, and through a mysterious family connection, she brings in professional ghostwriter Karl Ristoff, a “middle-aged white man,” to take over writing the blog just as Coretta is offered a chance at her own TV show. And Karl does-almost too well and with some nasty ethical repercussions.

La Petite Fadette by George Sand

Exhausted, Coretta confesses to Rachel that, as much as she loves blogging, she can’t maintain it. She gains respect from her popular “black Ken doll” boyfriend, Mike Cornelius, his “very prominent African-American venture capitalist” parents, and her peers, but she feels her friendship slipping with her best friend, Rachel Berstein. As the blog swells in popularity, Coretta collapses from her “teen-on-the-go” responsibilities of keeping up with her schoolwork, after-school activities, and social media–mediated social life. Seventeen-year-old black high school senior Coretta White starts her Tumblr, Little White Lies, to vent some redirected aggression against her parents’ opinions about politics and life.

La Petite Fadette by George Sand La Petite Fadette by George Sand

Is co-opting a persona or a culture that’s not one’s own ever OK-even when given permission to do so?










La Petite Fadette by George Sand