Perfect (58 page)

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Authors: Ellen Hopkins

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse, #Self-Esteem & Self-Reliance, #Dating & Sex

BOOK: Perfect
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A Reading Group Guide to
Perfect
by Ellen Hopkins

ABOUT THE BOOK

Everyone dreams about the perfect life, but an obsession with perfection can be crippling. Cara Sykes is beautiful, rich, and destined for Stanford. She has the seemingly ideal circumstance; however, unreal parental expectations have already sent her twin brother, Conner, to a psychiatric hospital for attempted suicide, and Cara herself, confused over her sexual identity, is afraid to admit that she is not sexually drawn to her boyfriend, Sean, but rather to Danielle, a girl she meets snowboarding. Her admission will destroy the perfect image her parents have impressed upon her. Sean O’Connell, a baseball star resolute on earning a scholarship to Stanford to be near Cara, pumps iron and takes steroids to become the perfect hitting machine, but the steroids send him into a spiral of rage. Paralleling their relationship is the story of two sisters, Kendra and Jenna Mathieson. Kendra, Conner’s former girlfriend, will do anything to become a supermodel, including starving her 5'10" frame down to a size 2, having rhinoplasty and a breast augmentation, and having sex with older men in the modeling world who promise to take her to the top. Jenna, wounded by living in the shadows of her “perfect” sister, pops pills, drinks, and flaunts her sexuality. Andre Kane, Jenna’s rich boyfriend, does not escape perfectionism—his mother is a plastic surgeon who turns image dreams into reality, and he himself, interested in becoming a professional dancer, fears sharing his passion with his parents because they believe a perfect life includes a financially rewarding career. Driven by expectations, all five teens feel disempowered and fear not living up to expectations. In order to survive, they must find courage to stand up for who they really are.

PREREADING ACTIVITY

Is perfection a reality or an unattainable abstraction? Explain.

In what ways do today’s youth feel a need to be perfect?

Is the need for perfection self-imposed or is it caused by external forces? Why are some individuals more driven than others to be perfect? Explain.

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

How does Cara view her parents? Describe her relationship with them. What happened to her brother, Conner?

Compare and contrast Kendra and Jenna. Are they close? Why or why not?

Why does Kendra’s mother impress the importance of pageants upon Kendra? What effect does the pressure have?

Jenna appears not to be driven by perfection. In fact, she seems to retaliate against her parents’ expectations, but she is self-destructive all the same. Explain.

Why does Jenna take Andre with her to have lunch with her father and his future wife? Why does she not feel good enough for Andre?

Sean begins as a likeable character, but as the story progresses he spins out of control. Why does he have difficulty accepting Cara’s sexuality?

Andre feels special affection for his grandparents. What did he learn about pursuing one’s dreams from his grandfather? How are his decisions affected by his relationship with his grandparents?

Kendra believes “Empty is the perfect state of being” What does she mean? What other characters in the story would agree with her? How might they define empty?

Sean lost his parents at an early age. How might this loss affect his fear of losing Cara? How might it impact his behavior?

Cara says, “Transformation begins—and ends—inside of you.” What accounts for this belief? What does it say about her ability to deal with her parents’ expectations of her?

When Sean learns that Cara is no longer interested in him, he does not want to stop his anger. He says he doesn’t want to stop it “because anger feels better than the pain of losing someone.” Do you agree or disagree? What accounts for Sean’s perspective?

In what way is Cara impacted by her brother’s death? Her parents? What does Sean learn from Conner’s death?

Shantell is a minor character in the story. In what way does she foil Jenna’s personality? What does Andre learn about relationships from Shantell?

One might say Andre finds release in dancing. Explain.

Which character has the most difficult challenges to overcome? Why? Who is the most likely to succeed and why?

Compare and contrast Andre’s mother and Cara’s mother. Which mother is more capable of understanding the damage she may have caused as well as her son’s or daughter’s feelings? Who is more likely to admit she has made parenting mistakes?

How can an emphasis on perfection make an individual believe he/she is not worthy or good enough?

Activities:

Identify passages for the main characters that illustrate their perspectives on and/or definition of love. Do their beliefs change throughout the story? What accounts for the way they define relationships? Write a short poem from the perspective of one character that illustrates his/her perspective on male/female relationships.

Individuals who have been driven to be perfect often say they are afraid of failure. Why might this fear exist? Is it rational? Interview a family member or another older person about how he/she set goals in high school. What goals did they achieve and what or who influenced the choices they made? What fears did they have? What would they change now if given the chance?

Hopkins’s work is rich in metaphor. Examine the metaphor that begins “Some people say love is fire.” What does this metaphor tell readers about the complexities of love? Find other examples of metaphor in the text and discuss their meaning. Try your hand at writing your own metaphor for perfection.

Research statistics on teens and plastic surgery or steroid use. What trends do you see? What dangers exist for young people who undergo plastic surgery or who use steroids?

Guide prepared by Pam B. Cole, Professor of English Education & Literacy, Kennesaw State University, Kennesaw, GA.

This guide has been provided by Simon & Schuster for classroom, library, and reading group use. It may be reproduced in its entirety or excerpted for these purposes.

 

Without Warning

 

Sometimes

your’re traveling

a highway, the only road

you’ve ever known,

and wham! A semi

comes from nowhere

and rolls right over you.

 

Sometimes

you don’t wake up.

But if you happen

to, you know things

will never be

the same.

 

Sometimes

that’s not

so bad.

 

Sometimes

lives intersect,

no rhyme, no reason,

except, perhaps,

for a passing semi.

Triad

 

Three

separate highways

intersect at a place

no reasonable person

would ever want to go.

 

Three

lives that would have

been cut short, if not

for hasty interventions

by loved ones. Or Fate.

 

Three

people, with nothing

at all in common

except age, proximity,

and a wish to die.

 

Three

tapestries, tattered

at the edges and come

unwoven to reveal

a single mutual thread.

The Thread

 

Wish

you could turn off

the questions, turn

off the voices,

turn off all sound.

 

Yearn

to close out

the ugliness, close

out the filthiness,

close out all light.

 

Long

to cast away

yesterday, cast

away memory,

cast away all jeopardy.

 

Pray

you could somehow stop

the uncertainty, somehow

stop the loathing,

somehow stop the pain.

Act

on your impulse,

swallow the bottle,

cut a little deeper,

put the gun to your chest.

Conner

Arrival

 

The glass doors swing open,

in perfect sync, precisely

timed so you don’t have

to think. Just stroll right in.

 

I doubt it’s quite as easy

to turn around and walk

back outside, retreat to

unstable ground. Home turf.

 

An orderly escorts me down

spit-shined corridors, past

tinted Plexiglas and closed,

unmarked doors. Mysteries.

 

One foot in front of the other,

counting tiles on the floor so

I don’t have to focus the blur

of painted smiles, fake faces.

 

A mannequin in a tight blue

suit, with a too-short skirt

(and legs that can wear it),

in a Betty Boop voice halts us.

 

I’m Dr. Boston. Welcome to

Aspen Springs. I’ll give you

the tour. Paul, please take his

things to the Redwood Room.

 

Aspen Springs. Redwood Room.

As if this place were a five-star

resort, instead of a lockdown

where crazies pace. Waiting.

At Least

 

It doesn’t have a hospital

stink. Oh yes, it’s all very

clean, from cafeteria chairs

to the bathroom sink. Spotless.

 

But the clean comes minus

the gag-me smell, steeping

every inch of that antiseptic

hell where they excised

 

the damnable bullet. I

wonder what Dad said when

he heard I tried to put myself

six feet under—and failed.

 

I should have put the gun

to my head, worried less

about brain damage, more

about getting dead. Finis.

 

Instead, I decided a shot

through the heart would

make it stop beating, rip

it apart to bleed me out.

I couldn’t even do that

right. The bullet hit bone,

left my heart in one piece.

In hindsight, luck wasn’t

 

with me that day. Mom

found me too soon, or my

pitiful life might have ebbed

to the ground in arterial flow.

 

I thought she might die too,

at the sight of so much blood

and the thought of it staining

her white Armani blouse.

 

Conner, what have you done?

she said. Tell me this was just

an accident.
She never heard

my reply, never shed a tear.

I Don’t Remember

 

Much after that, except

for speed. Ghostly red lights,

spinning faster and faster,

as I began to recede from

 

consciousness. Floating

through the ER doors,

frenzied motion. A needle’s

sting. But I do remember,

 

just before the black hole

swallowed me, seeing Mom’s

face. Her furious eyes

followed me down into sleep.

 

It’s a curious place, the

Land of Blood Loss and

Anesthesia, floating through it

like swimming in sand. Taxing.

 

After a while, you think you

should reach for the shimmering

surface. You can’t hold your

breath, and even if you could,

it’s dark and deep and bitter

cold, where nightmares and truth

collide, and you wonder if death

could unfold fear so real. Palpable.

 

So you grope your way up into

the light, to find you can’t

move, with your arms strapped

tight and overflowing tubes.

 

And everything hits you like

a train at full speed. Voices.

Strange faces. A witches’ stewpot

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