Frat girl

Kiley Roache

Book - 2018

Frat house Delta Tau Chi is on the verge of being banned from the school after being accused of offensive, sexist behavior. With one shot at a scholarship to the school of her dreams, Cassie pitches an unusual research project: to pledge DTC, take on the boys' club and provide proof of their misogynistic behavior. After meeting some of the pledges, Cassie realizes things aren't as simple as they appeared. With her academic future on the line, and her heart all tangled in a web of her own making, Cassie may have to reexamine a few truths and misconceptions.

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Subjects
Genres
Romance fiction
Young adult fiction
Campus fiction
Published
Toronto, Ontario, Canada : Harlequin Teen [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Kiley Roache (author)
Physical Description
438 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780373212347
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

What happens when you let a feminist into a frat house? Cassandra Davis is about to find out. When Cassandra's conservative, working-class Midwestern parentswho don't see the value in a woman's getting a college degreeare unable to pay the tuition for her dream school in California, she applies for and receives a full-ride scholarship on the basis of her research proposal: an undercover study of Delta Tau Chi, a fraternity plagued by accusations of sexism. At first Cassie is thrilled about the idea of taking the organization down, but after becoming the first successful female pledge in the American fraternity's history, she finds that her frat brothers are not all villainsin fact, many of them are capable of change. In her debut novel, Roache has created a narrator with a strong, relatable voice as well as a cast of nuanced characters full of pleasant surprises and believable personal growth. However, her prose often slips into the didactic, referencing theory dominated by white feminist icons ranging from Lena Dunham to Andrea Dworkin and Tina Fey. Mentions of the global South disappointingly rely on a victim mentality that oversimplifies women's struggles there, and her portrayal of working-class families feels condescending. The few characters of color in the book are two-dimensional.Blind spots around race, culture, and class distract from an otherwise thoughtful, entertaining, and politically relevant coming-of-age story. (Fiction. 16-adult) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.