I really wanted to like this book, but it had several issues that I couldn't get past. First things first, this book needed to be edited again. There were so many typos, grammatical errors, formatting issues, and timeline inconsistencies that could have easily been fixed. The naming of the characters was awkward. The main character is Casey, and the mean girl is Lacey. The Dean is the bad guy, and his henchman is Deon. What really bothered me about the book was that it really could have used some sensitivity readers. The main character refers to her nurse as a Nazi, and repeatedly makes jokes about it. There is a whole confrontation between Casey and her nemesis, Tony, that ends when Casey starts accusing Tony of being gay, as if that is the worst thing in the world. She says that she personally doesn't care that he's gay, but that doesn't stop her from using it as an insult. Casey's relationship with her teacher/mentor/father figure, Eli, seemed very inappropriate. It may not have been so strange if the readers had been given any background information, or any scenes from Casey's past that showed what exactly made her and Eli so close.
Like I said, I really wanted to like this, but it had some problems that I couldn't overlook. It had a lot of potential, and maybe if the book had gone through some more rounds of editing, it could have been a really good story. E.M. Rinaldi seems like she has a lot of potential, and I hope the next books in the series show more of her talent.