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The book suffers from Bay Area-itis, the belief held by some residents of the San Francisco Bay Area that they are at the center of the universe, the prophets of all that is new and about to become significant in American culture. The author lives and works in the Bay Area and constantly extrapolates lessons from the local university to "everywhere." Not surprisingly, the book is published by a Bay Area company. (As a professor at Indiana University, Bloomington, I can assure her that most of her points about admissions' policy do not apply here, nor at other public universities in this area, or at most schools in many other areas of the country.)
The book is also badly organized and the author often does not follow some interesting leads, instead she lapses into highly opinionated diatribes. Ironically, I should have been more interested in her comments about Berkeley--I hold two degrees from the school and spent almost ten years of my life there--but her discussion is often so convoluted that I became bored and skipped pages.
The book contains a few good nuggets--e.g., a nice summary of the history of women's education in the U.S.--but, on the whole, it delivers none of its promise: to inform the reader about the important subject of college admissions.
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