This is what happens when parenting becomes a competitive sport?
When best friends – Rose, Samantha, Azra, and Lauren – all with children the same age, are informed that a school for the exceptionally gifted is opening in their neighborhood of Crystal, Colorado, they are determined to secure their child/children a placement.
But at what cost?
The Gifted School has been marketed as Big Little Lies meets the College Admissions Scandal, and even though I understand where the comparison to the latter came from, I think Big Little Lies crossed with Desperate Housewives is a more apt description.
Aside from the obvious themes of competition and parental pressure, feelings of failure, judgement, sibling rivalry, aggression, discrimination, rejection, mob and mass mentality, and the spread of social media were prevalent issues. I felt so much empathy towards the poor children in this book. They were under constant and enormous pressure to succeed, some academically, others at sport. No parent should have the right to place such high expectations on their offspring, at the expense of their well-being, social development, and physical and mental health. It was evident that these parents loved their children but they needed a swift wake-up call.
The four women at the core of the novel certainly had an inconsistent rollercoaster friendship, where companionship, warmth, and understanding went hand in hand with ruthlessness, jealously and backstabbing. I was appalled by the way they related to one another, and if anyone in my life treated me that way I wouldn't have put up with it, but admit that it worked for these characters. Yes they made some terrible life choices, but when it really counted they had each other backs. Hats off to the author for choosing to show some pretty unique relationships, that weren't as toxic as they first appeared.
Instead of selecting the four mothers to narrate, we were given only one, along with a father from another, siblings from the third, and a child from the fourth. This worked well, a wormhole into each of the family's dynamics. The final perspective was that of a young boy from a different socioeconomic group, applying to Crystal Academy, which added another dimension to the novel.
Even though it was a provocative read, the promised secrets and lies just weren't scandalous enough for my liking, I craved more bad behaviour and wished the characters had of spiraled more out of control than they did. The ending had its pluses and minuses – I liked it, yet at the same time it was abrupt and inconsistent.
I buddy read this with Mandy, and we were both a little disappointed that it wasn't more shocking and dramatic. Overall it held our attention and kept us entertained, therefore we settled on a 4 star rating.