From bestselling author Nancy Rue comes a YA contemporary novel where
prom season takes on a deeper meaning, as a girl nominated for prom
queen as a joke decides to use the opportunity as a way to empower her
fellow classmates. And ends up questioning her self-perceptions in the
process.
For Tyler Bonning, not caring what others think is her super power. As
is her ability to find the perfect, cutting response. All she needs to
be happy is her group of equally smart and quirky friends and high
grades to get into a good college. Then she's nominated for prom queen
as a joke.
Deciding to make the most of the opportunity--and mask her pain--Tyler
starts a Prom for Everyone campaign intended help make the event more
affordable. In the process, she discovers the way she's perceived by her
classmates--as well as her supposedly close friends--may actually be
more important than she thought. And she doesn't like the person they
perceive her to be. With her parents pressuring her to focus on the
racial issues at school instead of a frivolous cause, and a growing
closeness to a boy who represents everything she once mocked, Tyler
questions who she really wants to be. And as prom approaches, she faces
her biggest challenge yet. One she can't handle on her own.
Limos, Lattes & My Life on the Fringe:
- features a diverse main protagonist
- focuses on the ideas of self and identity, and what we let define and
divide us
- provides an inspirational message for those dealing with tough
circumstances
- is the final book in the Real Life series, but can also be read as a
stand-alone novel