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| Innocence is lost. We are beyond that now. Knowing where we, as a culture and as individuals, go from here is enormously complex. This week's features deal with youth, sexuality, race, and social injustice - they  are sure to increase our understanding of these complex issues. Don't forget to check below for this week's discount code for special savings on these titles and more.  
  
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                              An honest, intimate look at the lives of today's teens—told through the true experiences of friends at a New England prep school Established  in 1798, Milton Academy has a proud history of achievement. It has  educated artists and CEOs; it has produced a long line of distinguished  scholars and dignitaries; and it has shepherded students through the  world of high-pressure academics for generations. Since its founding,  the public face of Milton had always been one of integrity and pride .  . . until a sex scandal rocked the campus and made headlines in the  spring of 2005. The offense? Teenagers doing no more than what others  had done before them—except this time they got caught. Restless Virgins is the riveting real-life story of a group of seniors who were there as  the "incident" (as it came to be called) unfolded: Whitney, the  athletic and sensual beauty every girl wants to be; Annie, who craves  acceptance but is torn between the desire for peer approval and musical  success; Jillian, the smart one who is sick of high school drama and  desperate to go to college; and Reed, a "hockey god" who has it all but  whose charisma masks a secret insecurity. From "friends with  benefits" to STDs, today's teens face a wider array of social and  sexual opportunities—and pressures—than ever before. Through its  eye-opening yet sensitive depiction of a group of normal kids with  normal struggles, Restless Virgins offers an important look at  contemporary adolescence no teen, parent, or educator can afford to  miss. And it is written by two recent Milton graduates who know this  world—and these students—like no others. |  |  
 
 
  
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                            In 1955 the killers of Emmett Till, a black Mississippi youth, were  acquitted because they were white. Forty years later, despite the  strong DNA evidence against him, accused murderer O. J. Simpson went  free after his attorney portrayed him as a victim of racism. The age of  white supremacy has given way to an age of white guilt—and neither has  been good for African Americans. Through articulate analysis and  engrossing recollections, acclaimed race relations scholar Shelby  Steele sounds a powerful call for a new culture of personal  responsibility.  |  |  | 
      
      
            
Buy either of these titles this week, and recieve an extra 5% off your total purchase - so read all you want - these titles and much more await you at eBooksAboutEverything.com! 
Use the following coupon code at checkout:
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