Meh

I was never part of a sorority. My college had one, with four members. This book is supposedly shines the light on sororities and will tell . . . pretty much what you already know. It follows four girls, and to find out what happens to the girls is the only reason to read this book. The revelations that are made are common of all college students for the most part, and for those that aren’t lack depth.
For instance,
- Is racism prevalent in sororities? If so, could you please use more than just two examples? I think it is but I would like more examples, especially when one of those examples, the main one, is from Mississippi. Furthermore, Melody says that the black sororities would not accept her, more detail please.
- The ethics of a student and professor dating.
- The ethics of cheating, which get a paragraph mention and that is it.
- The influence of men on the sorority.
- More about African American sororities. The city where I live in hosts a re-union in one of the major parks. There are complaints that would seem to indicate that such sororities are more than suggested here. How true is this?
- Is there a difference, as is implied, between north and south?