Sales’ (Once Was a Time, 2016, etc.) latest takes a messy dive into the world of public shaming and callout culture.
Seventeen-year-old Jewish high school senior Winter Halperin has her life figured out. Thanks to her blogger mother’s world-famous parenting strategies, she’s a National Spelling Bee champ who dreams of being a writer and is excited to be attending college in the fall. Everything is going smoothly until she casually tweets: “We learned many surprising things today. Like that dehnstufe is apparently a word, and that a black kid can actually win the Spelling Bee.“ Her tweet goes viral and her punishment is swift and severe: Brutally publicly shamed online, her spelling bee title and college acceptance are revoked. Winter is devastated; thinking she made a clever throwaway joke, she doesn’t understand how the world can see her as racist. She decides to sign up for a “reputation rehabilitation retreat,” where, through self-reflection, she ultimately finds a spark of hope for her future. While she is sometimes sympathetic and frequently frustrating, Winter never demonstrates a true shift toward understanding microaggressions, systemic racism, and white privilege. The few characters of color primarily seem to exist to explain race and white privilege to both the white protagonist and white readers. While clearly a cautionary tale, the book’s ultimate message is as muddled as the world of online shaming.
Timely but, like all of us, painfully imperfect.
(Fiction. 12-18)