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You should see me in a crown  Cover Image E-book E-book

You should see me in a crown

Summary: Liz Lighty has always done her best to avoid the spotlight in her small, wealthy, and prom-obsessed midwestern high school, after all, her family is black and rather poor, especially since her mother died; instead she has concentrated on her grades and her musical ability in the hopes that it will win her a scholarshipt to elite Pennington College and their famous orchestra where she plans to study medicine--but when that scholarship falls through she is forced to turn to her school's scholarship for prom king and queen, which plunges her into the gauntlet of social media which she hates and leads her to discoveries about her own identity and the value of true friendships.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781338503623
  • ISBN: 1338503626
  • ISBN: 9781338503265
  • Physical Description: remote
    1 online resource
  • Edition: First edition.
  • Publisher: New York : Scholastic Press, 2020.

Content descriptions

Target Audience Note:
Ages 15-18. Scholastic Press.
Grades 10-12. Scholastic Press.
Source of Description Note:
Description based on print version record and CIP data provided by publisher; resource not viewed.
Subject: African American teenage girls -- Juvenile fiction
Proms -- Juvenile fiction
Competition (Psychology) -- Juvenile fiction
Identity (Psychology) -- Juvenile fiction
Brothers and sisters -- Juvenile fiction
Grandparents -- Juvenile fiction
Friendship -- Juvenile fiction
High schools -- Fiction
Schools -- Fiction
Proms -- Fiction
Identity -- Fiction
Friendship -- Fiction
African Americans -- Fiction
Lesbians -- Fiction
African American teenage girls
Brothers and sisters
Competition (Psychology)
Friendship
Grandparents
Identity (Psychology)
Proms
Genre: Electronic books.
Fiction.
Juvenile works.

Electronic resources


Summary: Liz Lighty has always done her best to avoid the spotlight in her small, wealthy, and prom-obsessed midwestern high school, after all, her family is black and rather poor, especially since her mother died; instead she has concentrated on her grades and her musical ability in the hopes that it will win her a scholarshipt to elite Pennington College and their famous orchestra where she plans to study medicine--but when that scholarship falls through she is forced to turn to her school's scholarship for prom king and queen, which plunges her into the gauntlet of social media which she hates and leads her to discoveries about her own identity and the value of true friendships.
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