Secrets of Truth and Beauty

by Megan Frazer

Hardcover, 2009

Status

Available

Collection

Publication

Hyperion Book CH (2009), Hardcover, 352 pages

Description

Dara Cohen, a junior pageant princess turned chubby teenager, reconnects with an estranged older sister whom her parents have disowned for mysterious reasons.

User reviews

LibraryThing member stephxsu
Back when she was young and cute, Dara was a talent pageant star. Now, however, she’s in high school and fat. When her interpretation of an English class autobiography project causes the adults—especially her controlling parents—to freak, Dara decides to spend the summer with her estranged
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older sister, a family secret that her mother never talks about. Summer on a goat farm is like nothing Dara has ever known, but with the help of some new friends and a long-lost sister, Dara just might learn a few things about the importance of love, family, and self-acceptance.

SECRETS OF TRUTH AND BEAUTY is a surprisingly sweet read with strong undertones of Sarah Dessen’s work. At times a little choppy, the novel is overall a nice and quick read, perfect for those days when you want a little slice of optimism in the face of hardship.

Characters are strong in this book, but Dara is by far the most well-drawn and most likable. Unlike many other protagonists in books that deal with weight, Dara is not constantly apologetic of it, and undergoes a very real struggle to not let her weight define who she is. Dara’s infuriatingly controlling mother is the perfect foil to her growth in self-esteem; you’ll want to step right into the story and give Mrs. Cohen a good hard slap in the face. We can relate all too well to Dara’s struggle to love herself, when other important people in her life cannot seem to love her as she is.

When the plot moves to the goat farm, the story loses a bit of its footing and credibility as we are introduced to a number of characters that are never quite fully fleshed out. In the second half of the book there is a bit of wavering as to the story’s main conflict. Is it still about Dara’s learning to work with the body she has? But wait! What about that slightly weird arc regarding homosexuality? And what is UP with the romance that comes out of nowhere? The numerous elements introduced to us in the back half of the story conflicted with one another and made for some confusion.

Still, I definitely enjoyed SECRETS OF TRUTH AND BEAUTY. Dara is a darling protagonist, and you will not be able to resist cheering for her as she learns how to believe in herself and not let others’ words affect her so deeply.
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LibraryThing member librarybrandy
At its heart, this is a coming-of-age story about accepting oneself and looking beyond exterior labels to the person beneath, moving past one's history to create something new. The culmination isn't a big surprise, but where this book shines is in the characterizations: in lesser books, the Fat
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Girl's goal would be to lose weight to win over the boys; the gay characters would either be on a crusade to end discrimination everywhere or become the Fat Girl's Cause To End All Discrimination. Here, though? Yes, Dara is a Fat Girl, but it's not her whole identity. Yes, her friend is gay; yes, her sister is gay, but "gay" is not who they are, or even what they are. What could be labels as a shorthand to personality are more background details; they could just as easily have been "redheads" or "Canadian" for all it mattered. And that's an excellent thing--while they occasionally discussed the problems of being stereotyped for what they were, in Frazer's hands they were never treated as stereotypes.

(Disclosure: Meg and I went to library school together and I'm pleased to call her my friend--and chagrined that it took me this long to get around to reading her excellent book!)
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LibraryThing member devafagan
Enjoyable, warm, engaging and thought-provoking.

I particularly loved Dara herself, with her insecurities, her humor, her compassion, and her joy she really struck me as someone I would have liked to have as a friend. I also enjoyed all the sweet and quirky details about the characters of Jezebel
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farm. So much of this rang true to me with respect to perceptions of weight and how it impacts our self-worth. Some passages were painful to read, but the pain was always leavened by Dara's personality. And in the end I believed that she had achieved something truly significant.
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Awards

Isinglass Teen Read Award (Nominee — 2011)
ALA Rainbow Book List (Selection — Fiction — 2010)

Physical description

352 p.; 8.42 inches

ISBN

1423117115 / 9781423117117

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