A single name on a scholarship list shatters the moral universe of a privileged student. At a highly competitive school where futures are won and lost on merit, the golden ticket to an American university is supposed to reward the best and brightest. So when it goes to Teta Uwamahoro-the silent, shabbily-dressed girl from the shadows-the campus erupts in outrage. Mutesa, a top student poised for success, is at the center of the storm.
Consumed by bitter jealousy, she and her friends weave cruel theories to justify their failure. But a clandestine reading of Teta's application essay reveals a mind of profound vision, one that sees the "unseen" struggles everyone else ignores. This discovery sparks a transformative journey for Mutesa, leading her to question the hidden lives of the school's other "undeserving" winners: the beautiful girl hiding a family tragedy, the quiet boy archiving the school's secrets, and the outcast loved by the golden boy.
Each story challenges her beliefs about worth, justice, and the true cost of privilege. EVEN HER is a piercing literary debut that asks: in a world obsessed with who deserves what, are we all blind to the most deserving truths?
A single name on a scholarship list shatters the moral universe of a privileged student. At a highly competitive school where futures are won and lost on merit, the golden ticket to an American university is supposed to reward the best and brightest. So when it goes to Teta Uwamahoro-the silent, shabbily-dressed girl from the shadows-the campus erupts in outrage. Mutesa, a top student poised for success, is at the center of the storm.
Consumed by bitter jealousy, she and her friends weave cruel theories to justify their failure. But a clandestine reading of Teta's application essay reveals a mind of profound vision, one that sees the "unseen" struggles everyone else ignores. This discovery sparks a transformative journey for Mutesa, leading her to question the hidden lives of the school's other "undeserving" winners: the beautiful girl hiding a family tragedy, the quiet boy archiving the school's secrets, and the outcast loved by the golden boy.
Each story challenges her beliefs about worth, justice, and the true cost of privilege. EVEN HER is a piercing literary debut that asks: in a world obsessed with who deserves what, are we all blind to the most deserving truths?