Parachutes by Kelly Yang
Claire Wang is a "parachute," a wealthy teenager from Shanghai sent to the United States to live with a host family and attend a prestigious high school. Dani De La Cruz is Claire's host sister and attends the same high school on scholarship. She resents the privilege of students like Claire, while she cleans houses part-time and works for every success she attains. Both girls merely tolerate each other, until a series of traumatic events caused by male counterparts bring them together.
Review from School Library Journal Starred:
Dani, of Filipino descent and a scholarship student at a prestigious private school in Southern California, hopes to win a debate scholarship to Yale. To bring in some extra income, her mom rents out their spare room to an exchange student, Claire, one of many uber-wealthy students from China attending Dani's school. Although they live together, they have very different experiences at school. Through her part-time job as a house cleaner, Dani discovers how many of her classmates use their wealth to facilitate cheating and pay for opportunities she cannot access. Yang deftly weaves in parallels to recent real-life events, such as the Varsity Blues college admissions scandal and the Duke University email urging Chinese students to speak English. On top of these explorations of nationality and wealth is the realistically pervasive look at rape culture, from creepy host families and catcalling to a teacher sexually harassing a student and an actual rape. In short alternating chapters narrated by Dani and Claire, Yang creates a delicate balance between these heavier issues and the lighter moments of high school. The story seamlessly explores several difficult topics without veering into "issue-book" territory. The real feat comes at the end when Yang strikes a hopeful and powerful tone, despite the school's disappointing response to reports of sexual violence.