Friday, September 04, 2020

GOOD ENOUGH by Paula Yoo

 


Realistic Fiction, Middle & High School, Asian Americans, Achievement, Families, Humor, Romance, Violin

322 pages.

Description
Kirkus Reviews (January 1, 2008) Patti knows that the only thing harder than calculus, or maybe mastering the cadenza from the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto in E Minor, is being a PKD, a Perfect Korean Daughter. The PKD achieves great grades, shines at extracurriculars and is devoted to her church but never complains or brags. Most important, the PKD never questions her parents' pushing her to get into Harvard, Yale and Princeton and become a doctor or a lawyer. Though witty, linguistically gifted Patti has a number of academic talents, her greatest joy is playing the violin. She knows she's not supposed to rock the Harvard/Yale/Princeton boat but, encouraged by her violin teacher, she applies to Juilliard. Now her dilemma is not her SAT scores or her grades, but how to hide her desire to attend music school from her academically oriented parents. The Clash, a jam session and a new boy at school encourage Patti to break from her PKD shell and see her social life and violin studies in new ways. Teens living through the pressure of college applications and questioning their futures will sympathize with Patti in this enjoyable, funny but not superficial read, which bears many similarities to Alex Flinn's Diva (2006). (Fiction. YA)

My Comments A little romance, music, and a lot of effort put into studying. I like the way this story shows the perspective of a high school student who studies hard, is intelligent, has goals, but who also begins to question what path she truly wants to follow regardless of family pressure. She also shows sensitivy and maturity as she begins to understand why her parents push her so hard. A good choice for both middle and high school students.




No comments: