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A former headmaster of the prestigious Lawrenceville School, near Princeton, New Jersey, tells with an insider's authenticity the poignant story of the fierce competition for admission to select collegesand the havoc the resulting stresses can wreak on one teenager and her ambitious family.
Addressing a subject that troubles parents across the country, this heartfelt if stiffly written novel dramatizes the pressure put on high school students to win acceptance to elite universities. Having failed to get into Dartmouth after her senior year of high school, Amanda Bahringer is spending a year at St. Matthew's, an expensive prep school that prides itself on placing "underachieving" students in prestigious colleges. Amanda runs track and plays piano; although both pursuits should provide a reprieve from academic worries, they only serve as feathers in her academic cap and as conduits for additional neurosis. While the school's headmaster encourages her interest in poetry, she never allows herself to progress in a creative direction; instead, she throws herself ever deeper into her studies and exercise. She develops an eating disorder, coupled with addiction to a dizzying array of mood-altering prescription drugs, and records her increasingly dark thoughts in a journal whose contents parallel the narrative. Amanda becomes a symbol of an unfortunate trend in contemporary life, rather than a character. Her overbearing mother, consumed with ambition for her daughter, and her father, compassionate but ineffectual, are unable to help their only child find happiness as she moves down a progressively darker path (one that is rife with foreshadowing). Bunting (The Lionheads), a former boarding-school headmaster, knows this timely and relevant subject inside and out, but too often the novel resembles less an act of the imagination than a fictionalized newspaper article. The narrative's rather stilted tone seems mismatched to its protagonist, and Amanda's story is overshadowed by the moral it is trying to impart. 8-city author tour. (Apr. 1) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
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11/24/2002: I just finished this book an hour ago. It made me cry! Poor Amanda. She never had time to be happy for herself. Always trying to please everyone else. I can relate to her though. I'm alot like her. I've had an eating disorder and depression. Great Book. I reccomend it to anyone.
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11/08/2002: I just finished this book. I think it was a great book, but at some parts it was hard to follow. But I recommend it to anyone.
Not since A Separate Peace has the world of prep schools and tortured adolescence been portrayed with the sensitivity and authenticity that distinguish this novel by Josiah Bunting III, former headmaster of the Lawrenceville School, near Princeton, and author of the Vietnam novel The Lionheads, selected by Time magazine as one of the Ten Best Novels of the Year.
All Loves Excelling is the story of Amanda Bahringer, a bright, impressionable student at a prestigious boarding school, as she strives to live up to the expectations of her fiercely ambitious mother, Tess, by gaining the credentials for admission to Dartmouth. Her story reflects the pressures today's teenagers endure as they compete for admission to elite colleges. It reflects also the self-interest that drives some school authorities and which, added to parental pressure and often-skewed values, can combine to wreak havoc on the young.
The grueling preparations for the SATs, the competition for athletic or other extracurricular distinction, the anorexia, the drug use, the tough classes and manic instructorsall these elements of today's high-school headlines are there in Amanda's pressure-cooker school life as she struggles to measure up to everyone's demands but her own.
Parents of college-bound students and everyone involved with the world of education will empathize with the emotional stresses and school scenes depicted in this novel. Readers also will find it not only a moving story but a social commentary on the definitions of success that propel so many in today's world.
Josiah S. Bunting III is the platonic ideal of an American headmaster. In this beautifully observed, elegiac novel, he draws on his experience at the helm of the finest boarding schools in the nation to paint a poignant and unflinching picture of what adult ambition can do to children. A passionate and humane argument for individuality, creativity, and eccentricity in a society that places overwhelming pressures on its sons and daughters to achieve the conventional badges of success.Jeffrey Rosen, author of The Unwanted Gaze: The Destruction of Privacy in America
Nearly thirty years ago, Josiah Bunting wrote 'The Lionheads,' perhaps the tenderest and most intelligent novel to emerge from the Vietnam War. Since then he has become one of the nation's most respected schoolmasters, and he has brought that experience to bear in 'All Loves Excelling.' It is fully the equal of 'The Lionheads'indeed, the equal of any coming-of-age novel in recent memory. Beautifully written, exquisitely sensitive, infuriating, and heartbreaking.Andrew Ferguson, senior editor, The Weekly Standard, author of Fools' Names, Fools' Faces
Josiah Bunting's 'All Loves Excelling' brings into high relief the hopelessness of our era's hollow notions of success. Readers may be reminded of Judith Guest's 'Ordinary People,' although here the agonizing pursuit of the wrong human prizes takes place in a vividly realized prep school world. At once moral fable and beautifully nuanced social commentary, this fine new novel begs our attention.Richard A. Hawley, Headmaster, University School, Ohio; author of The Headmaster's Wife and The Headmaster's Papers
Josiah Bunting's latest novel is an anatomy of the little known and not so perfect world of prep schools, Ivy League colleges, and high ambition, where self-interest often masquerades as parental love. 'All Loves Excelling' is more than gripping fictionit is a morality tale for our times of good people doing very bad things. Few couldor wouldwrite so brilliantly of those who have everything and yet nothing.Victor Davis Hanson, author of The Land Was Everything and The Soul of Battle
Author Biography: Josiah Bunting III was headmaster of the Lawrenceville School, an independent boarding school, from 1987 to 1995. A Rhodes Scholar and Oxford graduate, he served in Vietnam, then was president of Briarcliff College in New York, Hampden-Sydney College in Virginia, and now superintendent of the Virginia Military Institute. He is author of The Lionheads, The Advent of Frederick Giles, and most recently An Education for Our Time. Bunting also is a classical pianist and a long-distance runner.
Addressing a subject that troubles parents across the country, this heartfelt if stiffly written novel dramatizes the pressure put on high school students to win acceptance to elite universities. Having failed to get into Dartmouth after her senior year of high school, Amanda Bahringer is spending a year at St. Matthew's, an expensive prep school that prides itself on placing "underachieving" students in prestigious colleges. Amanda runs track and plays piano; although both pursuits should provide a reprieve from academic worries, they only serve as feathers in her academic cap and as conduits for additional neurosis. While the school's headmaster encourages her interest in poetry, she never allows herself to progress in a creative direction; instead, she throws herself ever deeper into her studies and exercise. She develops an eating disorder, coupled with addiction to a dizzying array of mood-altering prescription drugs, and records her increasingly dark thoughts in a journal whose contents parallel the narrative. Amanda becomes a symbol of an unfortunate trend in contemporary life, rather than a character. Her overbearing mother, consumed with ambition for her daughter, and her father, compassionate but ineffectual, are unable to help their only child find happiness as she moves down a progressively darker path (one that is rife with foreshadowing). Bunting (The Lionheads), a former boarding-school headmaster, knows this timely and relevant subject inside and out, but too often the novel resembles less an act of the imagination than a fictionalized newspaper article. The narrative's rather stilted tone seems mismatched to its protagonist, and Amanda's story is overshadowed by the moral it is trying to impart. 8-city author tour. (Apr. 1) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
Adult/High School-This cautionary tale about the pressures ambitious parents can place on their children is played out in the life of Amanda Bahringer, who knows her own strengths and limitations, but tries desperately to meet the goals her mother has set for her. She graduates from high school with above-average grades and reasonably good SAT scores, sufficient to secure admission to any number of good colleges, but not impressive enough for admission to Dartmouth, her mother's choice. Enrolled in a prestigious prep school as a "post graduate" student, Amanda has five months to improve her grade-point average and raise her test scores. She is also expected to continue to run cross-country and study piano. She subjects herself to a regimen that allows little time for sleep, relaxation, or friendships, and soon she needs pills to go to sleep and to boost her energy during the day, and begins to eat less and less. Amanda gives all she has, and raises her SATs and her grades, but still is not accepted to Dartmouth. Her solution is to put her heaviest clothes on her rail-thin body, walk to the frozen river nearby, weight her pockets with stones, and step out onto the ice. In his eulogy, the headmaster, who had taught her poetry class and recognized her gifts, describes the school's failure to recognize Amanda's isolation, her fears, and "[her] terror of disappointing our expectations and ambitions for her-on the churning little island of ambition we seem to have turned into." A modern tragedy with lessons for teens and their parents.-Molly Connally, Kings Park Library, Fairfax County, VA Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
In All Loves Excelling, author Josiah Bunting draws upon his experiences as a former headmaster at the Lawrenceville School (near Princeton) to craft a sensitive and compelling story of Amanda, a young female student trying to handle the pressures that beset teenagers today including the fierce competition for admission to leading colleges, the expectations of ambitious parents, the self-promoting agendas of school officials, and the definitions of success prevalent in contemporary society. All Loves Excelling is a superbly crafted, original, and highly recommended novel.
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