The brutal, materialistic and dysfunctional underbelly of prep schools and the females who live in it create the foundation for Schutt’s beautifully written but light-on-substance novel (following 2004’s National Book Award finalist Florida
). In the midst of 1997 Manhattan, all-girl prep school Siddons churns out ladies with a wide spectrum of academic skills, mental problems and severe insecurities, all of whom have been touched in some way by the novel’s saintly lynchpin, Astra Dell, who leaves her studies behind to fight her rare cancer. Schutt introduces a large cast of characters who are dealing with Astra’s absence and their own personal problems: Astra’s best friend, anorexic Car; “dirty girl” Marlene; the inseparable and insensitive Alex and Suki; lesbian outcast Lisa; and their beloved instructors, the awkward Anna Mazur and Tim Weeks, the handsome colleague Anna’s in love with. Unfortunately, Schutt shoehorns too many characters into a relatively thin book, and though there isn’t a boring sentence in here, Schutt doesn’t do enough with the familiar prep school setting to make the story resonate. (Apr.)