Available Formats
Private Lessons
By (Author) Cynthia Salaysay
Candlewick Press,U.S.
Candlewick Press,U.S.
4th September 2024
United States
Young Adult
Fiction
Childrens / Teenage general interest: Music and musicians
Childrens / Teenage general interest: Places and peoples
Childrens / Teenage personal and social topics: Dating, relationships, romance a
FIC
Paperback
320
Width 141mm, Height 211mm, Spine 23mm
278g
Beautifully explores topics not often addressed. . . . Claire's need for affection and acceptance leads her into entirely believable and utterly sad encounters, while the strength she musters carries her through to an uplifting conclusion. Booklist (starred review)
After seventeen-year-old Claire Alalays fathers death, only music has helped her channel her grief. Claire likes herself best when she plays his old piano, a welcome escape from the sadnessand her traditional Filipino mothers prayer groups. In the hopes of earning a college scholarship, Claire auditions for Paul Avon, a prominent piano teacher, who agrees to take Claire as a pupil. Soon Claire loses herself in Pauls world and his way of digging into a compositions emotional core. She practices constantly, foregoing a social life, but no matter how hard she works or how well she plays, it seems impossible to gain Pauls approval, let alone his affection. Author Cynthia Salaysay composes a moving, beautifully written portrait of rigorous perfectionism, sexual awakening, and the challenges of self-acceptance. Now in paperback with an updated cover, Private Lessons is a timely and vital story that delves into a complicated student/teacher relationship, as well as class and cultural differences, with honesty and grace.
In her debut novel, Salaysay does an excellent job of exploring all these facets and handles them with a sense of honesty and realism that allows Claire to shine as a fully-realized, completely believable character who will resonate with older teens...An excellent coming-of-age story with strong, believable characters and situations.
School Library Journal (starred review)
Salaysay's debut novel beautifully explores topics not often addressed in YA fiction...Salaysay gets so much right, including the difference between public school in middle-class, heavily Asian Fremont and the rarefied, primarily white private-school world of San Francisco. Claire's need for affection and acceptance leads her into entirely believable and utterly sad encounters, while the strength she musters carries her through to an uplifting conclusion.
Booklist (starred review)
The book is deft in conveying the hothouse intimacy of lessons, where physical touching and side-by-side closeness are the normsbut may also blend into grooming. The book is keenly realistic in the gradualness of Claires understanding and in her response to the event; theres no grandstanding punishment for Paul, but readers will still cheer to see Claire succeeding without him on her own terms.
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books (starred review)
Lyrical and complicated...In the #MeToo era, this novel well depicts the subtle and fractured emotions involved when a young person comes under the spell of a charismatic, powerful mentor.
School Library Connection
Salaysays writing is fluid and evocative. Teens will recognize Claires desire for acceptance, profound grief, and drive to succeed at something she loves. The books ultimately heartening ending will empower young people and give them hope that gradual recovery from trauma is possible.
The Horn Book
A must-read for everyone, but especially women.
Chinelo Okparanta, author of Under the Udala Trees
Cynthia Salaysay holds a bachelors degree in English from University of California, Berkeley, and has workshopped her fiction at Tin House. She has written food and culture articles for the San Francisco Examiner, the San Francisco Bay Guardian, the East Bay Express, and Civil Eats. Currently, she works as a Reiki practitioner and an operating-room nurse in Oakland, California. This is her first novel.