Pride and Prejudice is transported into the cutthroat world of high school speech competitions in this humorous and timely retelling.
When Firoze Darcy first meets Leela Bose, she is singing her heart out while standing on a cafeteria table. The wealthy, very proper, and extremely attractive Firoze is horrified, especially after she makes a light joke at his expense. Leela, one of the stars of her high school’s debate team, is intrigued when she hears from her coaches—the husband-and-wife team of Mr. and Mrs. Bennet—that exclusive Netherfield Academy, where Darcy is forensics team president, will be among those competing against them. When Darcy’s snobbishness becomes apparent, however, Leela declares him a rival. DasGupta’s Austen retelling both closely follows the original classic and updates it in refreshing ways. Darcy is the biracial son of a Pakistani Muslim mother and White British father. Indian American Leela, who is from a Bengali Hindu family, is taken aback when she learns that his mother is the president of Pemberley, the prestigious (and costly) university she has long dreamed of attending. Nods to Austen’s original dialogue are present throughout, requiring readers to occasionally suspend disbelief given the cast of contemporary teens. Class, colorism, and the complicated nature of South Asian American identity are explored, while the scandal at the heart of the book has been updated in a realistic way that gives young women space to speak up and fight back.
A delight.
(author's note) (Fiction. 13-18)