Tracy Flick Can’t Win
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By:
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Tom Perrotta
About this listen
Soon to be a major film
Tracy Flick, star of Election and one of the most memorable characters of our time, returns in this dark and insightful comedy about midlife.
Ambitious and hardworking Tracy Flick feels underappreciated and stuck. Her job as a high school assistant principal isn’t the political career she dreamed of as an over-achieving teen, so when the longtime principal abruptly announces his retirement, offering a rare chance of promotion, Tracy is filled with zeal at the prospect of success.
But nothing ever comes easily to Tracy Flick, no matter how diligent or qualified she happens to be. As she takes her shot at the top job, her male colleagues’ determination to honour Vito Falcone, a star quarterback of dubious character, triggers troubling memories of her high school experience, and storm clouds brewing in her present – her goals, career and relationships – send Tracy spiralling.
‘One of the great writers that we have today. I love this book’ Harlan Coben
‘Engrossing and mordantly funny’ People
‘Told with Perrotta’s piercing wit, wisdom, and exquisite insight into human folly, Tracy’s second act delivers acerbic insight about frustrated ambition’ Esquire
‘Brilliant, biting satire’ Associated Press
©2023 Tom Perrotta (P)2023 HarperCollins Publishers LimitedCritic Reviews
‘Engrossing and mordantly funny’ People
‘Told with Perrotta’s piercing wit, wisdom, and exquisite insight into human folly, Tracy’s second act delivers acerbic insight about frustrated ambition’ Esquire
‘One of the great writers that we have today. I love this book’ Harlan Coben
‘This is the rare sequel that lives up to the original’ Publishers Weekly
‘Brilliant, biting satire’ Associated Press
‘Humorous yet humane . . . prescient, darkly comical’San Francisco Chronicle
‘Short chapters from many perspectives keep readers alternately laughing and gasping’ Los Angeles Times
‘Perrotta’s great gift is that he lets his love for his characters, flaws and all, shine through. . . . I was rooting hard for Tracy Flick to, finally, win’ Seattle Times