Briarcliff Prep

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Fourteen-year-old Avielle LeBeau is starting her freshman year at Briarcliff Preparatory School for Girls, one of the few remaining Historically Black Boarding Schools. She has dreams of fitting in with kids who look like her, continuing her family legacy and joining the school newspaper — and she desperately wants to catch the eye of a certain sophomore math whiz who attends Preston Academy across the street. But all of these wants become obsolete when Avi discovers a devastating secret about her big sister’s boyfriend.

Avi has two choices: she can keep this secret and pray it doesn’t blow up in their faces, or she can tell the truth, risking her sister’s reputation and possibly destroying the foundation of their relationship.

BRIARCLIFF PREP is a coming-of-age story set in a space where the expectations of gender and race collide, familial responsibilities are tested, and sisterhood may be a saving grace.

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Praise for Briarcliff Prep

★ 11/1/2022

Avielle is in her first year of high school at a historically Black boarding school for girls where she joins her older sister (a senior). Of course, there’s an all-boys school across the way, where her sophomore twin brothers attend. Since parents and guardians are not in the day-to-day, the main characters go through the school year with a bit more freedom and agency than is usually typical in a YA novel. Soon enough, Avi notices things about her sister’s boyfriend that nobody else wants to accept, which eventually becomes a crisis that will test her mettle. Meanwhile, she has to juggle her classes and her own problems, such as how to get her creative writing out there. Peppins’ debut explores a variety of themes, illustrating sisterhood, positive and non-positive models of parenting and relationships, and how those can be affected by violence, abuse, and secrets. The third-person narrative effectively takes on gender and race in a realistic setting with characters who all feel real and true. Peppins treats her characters and topic carefully, gracefully taking on the themes and using the boarding school’s classes to emphasize the importance of Black writers and icons in helping young people bolster their own understanding of the strength of their identity and community. A fresh and thoughtful take on the boarding school setting.

Booklist

★ 10/31/2022

Avielle LeBeau is an incoming freshman at prestigious Briarcliff Preparatory School for Girls, a Historically Black Boarding School in Georgia attended largely by affluent Black teens. Avi is excited to finally be in the same school system as her older siblings, especially her sister Belle, a senior and the most promising performer of Briarcliff’s dance troupe, the Cheetahnaires. Avi also has her own aspirations: she’s set on making a good impression with the staff of Briarcliff’s student newspaper Cliff News, determined to become their creative writing columnist. Avi doesn’t take long to make new friends, and she soon develops feelings for her handsome math tutor Quincy, who goes to the neighboring all-boys school and happens to be her older brother’s best friend. But when Avi witnesses Belle’s boyfriend, son of the all-boys school’s headmaster, physically assaulting Belle, Avi struggles to advocate for justice and maintain her fledgling social life at school. Brimming with a wealth of pop culture references—Belle dreams of modeling her career after “Beyoncé’s dance captain”—and told via a limited omniscient viewpoint that renders Avi’s life and the people around her in expertly nuanced detail, this powerful debut compassionately tackles themes of class privilege and domestic violence. Ages 14–up. Agent: Jas Perry, KT Literary. (Nov.)

Publishers Weekly

2022-08-03
A 14-year-old girl discovers a dangerous secret that puts her relationships to the test.

Avielle LeBeau has dreamed of carrying on her family’s legacy of attending Historically Black Boarding Schools at Briarcliff Preparatory School for Girls, especially since it means being with her older sister, Belle, and near her twin brothers, who attend all-boys Preston Academy. Despite her excitement, Avi worries about landing a spot on the prestigious school paper and adjusting to life away from home. Her hectic schedule fills with extracurriculars, homework, a budding romance, and social events—but it doesn’t escape her notice that Belle’s boyfriend seems off. Avi notices how controlling he is, telling Belle how to dress and who to be friends with, and after witnessing an explosive argument between them, she knows something is wrong. Suddenly Avi’s problems seem small as this larger crisis unfolds. Debut author Peppins’ thoughtful, realistic writing shows the alienation that victims of domestic violence endure along with the impact it can have on those who love them but have a limited ability to bring about real change. Through limited omniscient narration, readers enjoy a detailed account of Avi’s life at an HBBS; however, the author doesn’t skimp on the characterizations of members of Avi’s core support system. Many people and subjects significant to Black culture are woven into the story and will spark recognition for many readers.

A necessary story, full of emotion and with a hopeful ending. (author’s note) (Fiction. 14-18)

Kirkus Reviews