Let me tell you about this book and how it affected me profoundly from when I first read it in eighth grade to my last days as a senior.
Ok, when I first read this a few years back, I thought, "Hey, this is a pretty good book." I did not fully appreciate this book yet. Then I picked it up again sometime in my sophomore year and realized, I can identify with a lot of this stuff. From Lex trying to be the perfect student to Max trying to prove that he can be successful in his own way, I identified with some trait of each character. Why? Because they were real. They were written as real, honest-to-God people who had massive flaws and dreams. Did they swear a lot? Well, yeah. So did the people in my school. Were there stereotypes? Yes, because, believe it or not, some stereotypes actually exist. Did plot seem plausible? Well, no, because I doubt that could ever happen ever, but I don't read for normal stories, I read for excitement and action.
Anyway, senior year rolled around and I picked up the book again. And I realized: Holy crap, all this stuff is happening to me. Not the whole hacking into an Ivy League school, but the stress of a massive test, creating the perfect person on paper, and, most of all, waiting for that final decision.
*Spoilers beyond this point* Another great example of how this book is so fantastically great to relate to: The ending. My God, the ending. The fact that Lex DID NOT get into Harvard made this book gold for me. She was perfect, she did everything, and she still didn't get in. This hit home for me when I didn't get into my first choice. Because, like Lex, I did get that razor-thin envelope. And it hurt. Then there was the page before when she said it didn't all matter, but it does, even a little bit. And she doesn't sugarcoat that. Her reaction is so raw and real and something a ton of people can relate to. I really appreciated that.
And the last section, the last few paragraphs about why she told this story, is just the best. She acknowledges that not everything worked out. Lex says she knows the system was broken, but she went with it. Why? Because it was the only way she knew how. So this story was about the time she didn't follow the system and how the system was shattered. We'd all like to see that every once in a while, right?
I get that this book isn't everyone's cup of tea because of the language or the content in general, but this was one of the realest, rawest books in my life and it is probably to this day the one I best relate to. I recommend it wholeheartedly to anyone, and particularly to those in their senior year of high school.