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''How Opal Mehta Got Kissed, Got Wild, and Got a Life'' is a young adult novel by Kaavya Viswanathan, an Indian-American woman who wrote it just after she graduated from high school. Its 2006 debut was highly publicized while she was enrolled at Harvard University, but the book was withdrawn after it was discovered that portions had been plagiarized from several sources, including the works of Salman Rushdie and Meg Cabot. Viswanathan apologized and said any similarities were "completely unintentional and unconscious." All shelf copies of ''Opal Mehta'' were ultimately recalled and destroyed by the publisher, and Viswanathan's contract for a second book was canceled. ==Book deal== While attending Bergen County Academies, Viswanathan showed her writing – including a several-hundred page novel on Irish history she had already completed – to Katherine Cohen of IvyWise, a private college admissions consultancy which Viswanathan's parents had hired to help with their daughter's application process.〔 Through Cohen, Viswanathan was signed by the William Morris Agency under senior agent and William Morris partner Jennifer Rudolph Walsh〔〔 and referred to book packaging company 17th Street Productions (now called Alloy Entertainment),〔 a media firm responsible for packaging the ''Gossip Girl'' and ''The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants'' book series, among others. On the basis of an outline and four chapters of the novel that would become ''Opal Mehta'', Viswanathan eventually signed a two-book deal with Little, Brown and Company〔 for an advance originally reported to be $500,000.〔〔 She began writing the book the summer before college, and finished it during her freshman year at Harvard College, while taking a full course load.〔 ''Opal Mehta'' was published on April 4, 2006,〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=''How Opal Mehta Got Kissed, Got Wild, and Got a Life'' (Hardcover): Reviews and Product Details ) 〕 and Viswanathan was profiled by ''The New York Times'' on April 6, 2006.〔 ''Opal Mehta'' centers on an academically oriented Indian-American girl who, after being told by a Harvard College admissions officer that she is not well-rounded, doggedly works to become a typical American teen: ultrasocial, shopping- and boy-driven, and carelessly hip.〔 With ''Publishers Weekly'' calling the book "''Legally Blonde'' in reverse," Viswanathan stated that her own college prep experience had inspired the novel: "I was surrounded by the stereotype of high-pressure Asian and Indian families trying to get their children into Ivy League schools."〔 When asked about her influences in an interview given to ''The Star-Ledger'' of Newark, New Jersey (before any allegations of plagiarism had surfaced), Viswanathan responded that "nothing I read gave me the inspiration" to write the novel. Michael Pietsch later told ''The New York Times'' that Viswanathan’s advance for her two book deal was less than the previously publicized amount of $500,000, and that it was split between the author and Alloy Entertainment. Alloy President Leslie Morgenstein asserted that while the firm helped Viswanathan "conceptualize and plot the book,"〔 it did not help with the actual writing. Though Alloy was no longer involved once the book was sold to Little, Brown,〔〔 the company shares the copyright with Viswanathan.〔〔 Her agent Walsh told ''The New York Times'' that the plot and writing of ''Opal Mehta'' had been "1,000 percent" Viswanathan's.〔〔 The novel was edited by Asya Muchnick at Little, Brown,〔〔 and the movie rights to the book were sold to DreamWorks SKG in February 2006.〔 ''Opal Mehta'' garnered mixed reviews, many of which described Viswanathan as an author of "chick lit." 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「How Opal Mehta Got Kissed, Got Wild, and Got a Life」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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