I, Claudia by Mary McCoy
At Imperial Day Academy, Claudia McCarthy tries to become invisible because of her limp and speech impediment. But her enemy, Honor Council member Livia Drusus, convinces Claudia to run for student senate. As she rises through the ranks of student government, Claudia discovers is that the more power she gains, the more questions she has about the corrupting nature of that power. This is a retelling of the 1934 novel “I, Claudius.”
Review from School Library Journal:
Claudia McCarthy is the (possibly unreliable) narrator of this modern take on I, Claudius. She leads readers through four years at the exclusive Los Angeles Imperial Day Academy. The teen is an amateur historian and an outsider who becomes more and more enmeshed in the inner political circle of the student senate and honor council. There are no friends at Imperial Day, only potential supporters and adversaries; alliances and allegiances shift constantly. Adults—both teachers and parents—are distant and mostly unimportant: the students determine who is popular, who is elected to office, and whose reputation will remain untarnished. This Lord of the Flies—like work is packed with political intrigue and maneuvering. Interspersed with Claudia's commentary are conversations with her therapist, as well as transcripts of an Imperial Day Board of Commissioners hearing, both of which add insight and uncertainty. McCoy's cast of schemers and sycophants is complex and finely detailed, and readers will never be quite sure of their motivations. The plot twists and expert foreshadowing will keep teens guessing.