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Expect depth and razor sharp wit in this YA novel from the author of The Interestings. Entertainment Weekly
A prep school tale with a supernatural-romance touch, from genius adult novelist Meg Wolitzer. Glamour
Basically everything Meg Wolitzer writes is worth reading, usually over and over again, and her YA debut . . . is no exception. TeenVogue.com
If life were fair, Jam Gallahue would still be at home in New Jersey with her sweet British boyfriend, Reeve Maxfield. She d be watching old comedy sketches with him. She d be kissing him in the library stacks. She certainly wouldn t be
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Produktbeschreibung
Expect depth and razor sharp wit in this YA novel from the author of The Interestings. Entertainment Weekly

A prep school tale with a supernatural-romance touch, from genius adult novelist Meg Wolitzer. Glamour

Basically everything Meg Wolitzer writes is worth reading, usually over and over again, and her YA debut . . . is no exception. TeenVogue.com

If life were fair, Jam Gallahue would still be at home in New Jersey with her sweet British boyfriend, Reeve Maxfield. She d be watching old comedy sketches with him. She d be kissing him in the library stacks. She certainly wouldn t be at The Wooden Barn, a therapeutic boarding school in rural Vermont, living with a weird roommate, and signed up for an exclusive, mysterious class called Special Topics in English.But life isn t fair, and Reeve Maxfield is dead. Until a journal-writing assignment leads Jam to Belzhar, where the untainted past is restored, and Jam can feel Reeve s arms around her once again. But there are hidden truths on Jam s path to reclaim her loss.

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Autorenporträt
Meg Wolitzer’s novels include The Interestings; The Uncoupling; The Ten-Year Nap; The Position; and The Wife. Wolitzer’s short fiction has appeared in The Best American Short Stories and The Pushcart Prize. About The Interestings, the New York Times Book Review said, “Remarkable . . . [ The Interestings’s] inclusive vision and generous sweep place it among the ranks of books like Jonathan Franzen’s Freedom and Jeffrey Eugenides’ The Marriage Plot. The Interestings is warm, all-American, and acutely perceptive about the feelings and motivations of its characters, male and female, young and old, gay and straight; but it’s also stealthily, unassumingly, and undeniably a novel of ideas. . . . With this book [Wolitzer] has surpassed herself.”