8 member(s) found this review helpful.
This book was so good - I was tempted to keep it for my daughter to read when she grows up. It was a slow start, but after I got into it, I could not put it down. No matter what cliche you were part of in high school, you will be able to relate to the characters. All the things you thought and felt no one else was going through - this author clearly understands. She did a great job capturing the turbulent emotions of teenagers. If you have a teenage girl - you should definitely check out this book. Excellent read!

Kendra M. (
KendraM) wrote on 4/18/2008...
7 member(s) found this review helpful.
This was definitely one of the most engrossing novels I've read so far this year. PREP is the story of Lee, an insightful and eloquent (yet insecure) teen from Indiana. Remembering words her middle class father spoke years before ("these are the kinds of houses where they send their sons to boarding school"), she has made it her goal to attend an elite boarding school. And she achieves it-- with a scholarship. The story commences as Lee begins her first year at Ault (think Andover) and concludes as she graduates four years later. Lee's story is told as a kind of memoir-- she's an adult now, recalling these events of years before.
This was an Amazon recommendation since I read Tom Brown's Schooldays. And, it's similar-- a bit. Like Schooldays, History Boys, Charlotte Simmons, and even Harry Potter, etc., the book follows the lives of several teens during their formative years. I'm not sure everyone would like it-- I'm not sure I'd recommend it to my husband, for instance, but it was indeed excellent. The author, Curtis Sittenfeld , really has the voice of a young insecure teen growing into a more confident, but never completely secure, young woman. Initiallly, I thought the author was a man and was completely taken aback-- how could a man actually know this girl so thoroughly? However, Curtis Sittenfeld is indeed a woman. And, the protagonist and her friends and classmates lives were exactly as I remembered my own life and those of my friends and classmates during high school. Truly, the authenticity the author brought to this book-- the dialogue, the events, the crushes, the friendships-- was uncanny.
I've read the negative reviews here, but disagree with some of the reasoning. One reviewer, for instance, writes about how boring the sex scenes were. With all due respect, that reviewer missed the point-- of course the sex was boring and empty and that was the very purpose of writing about it. So much the narrator believed or hoped to be important was or turned out to be empty and insignificant (even while remaining a pivotal event in her own life).
If you're female and if your own memories of high school are less than ideal, I completely recommend this book but also warn you to read this with caution. For me, this brought back memories I haven't even thought about in years. And, worse, it made some of those memories absolutely new-- as if they happened yesterday. Obsessions over insignificant events become magnified . . . analyzing and over-analyzing every response and comment from every person within your social circle. . . reading between the lines when the lines themselves are perfectly clear. . . accepting much less than you deserve. . . giving less to others than they deserve (or maybe worse-- giving more to others than warranted). . . Prep will make all these memories new again.

Valerie P. (
vprosser) wrote on 5/12/2006...
4 member(s) found this review helpful.
While I liked the references to the 80s teen culture (as I was also a teen in the 80s), I absolutely could not stand the main character, Lee. I cannot remember reading a book where I so disliked the main character. She was so irritating, I contemplated just quitting the book, but I wanted to see how it ended. I'm glad I read it, but I still can't get over how much I disliked Lee. It made me wonder if the author had any of the character flaws like Lee...and if she did, I feel sorry for her!
4 member(s) found this review helpful.
LOVED IT! Had a boyfriend that went to the school where this was based and it was nostalgic for me. Great writing and hate to part with it but I will never read it again, I just don't read fiction that much.
3 member(s) found this review helpful.
Although this book garnered wide acclaim from the likes of Dave Eggers and Wally Lamb, I found it dull, trite, and predictable. The reviews compared it to J.D. Salinger; I can't stand his works, but the comparison is pretty accurate. So, if you're a Salinger fan, have at "Prep." Otherwise, don't waste your time.
3 member(s) found this review helpful.
Not your typical "chick lit". The protagonist *is* hard to love, but that's what makes this book easy to love. Interesting plot that doesn't follow the typical rich-girl-meets-boy story arc.
3 member(s) found this review helpful.
Sittenfeld has successfully captured the voice of an angst-ridden teenager struggling with school, friends, and love.
3 member(s) found this review helpful.
I did not really enjoy this book. The writting is good but the main character is impossible to like.
2 member(s) found this review helpful.
This book was good but at the same time difficult to stick with. The main character is so incredibly negative and passive, that it is difficult to relate to or root for her in any way. Some of her feelings and the situations she found herself in I could relate to certainly, but her response was at times maddening. I wanted to choke her and tell her to get off her butt and do something about it. Even at the end, when she does finally do something in a small way, she screws it up.
Reading about the school and its students was very intersting, however. Not having ever gone to or known anyone to have gone to boarding school, it was interesting to peek inside one (if Sittenfeld's description is accurate, which is questionable since she's from Iowa and herself did not go to boarding school).
2 member(s) found this review helpful.
This book was interesting. Not my favorite, but interesting nonetheless. I couldn't relate to the main character.