To Have and Have More

"There's no such thing as a nice rich kid."

Told through the eyes of a Korean girl adopted into a wealthy white family, this darkly funny debut explores casual racism, privilege, and the vicious twists of friendship. 

Derrymore Academy is home to teenagers who have their eyebrows shaped and their sweet sixteens tented. Their first kisses arrive around the same time as their boating licenses and they celebrate getting their braces off with Mediterranean vacations. It is here that Emery Hooper, fluent in private school and country club mores, thrives.

The one blight on Emery's otherwise perfect life? Lilah Chang. The Chinese-American student is the embarrassing epitome of every Asian stereotype Emery despises. Lilah is both astounded and hopelessly self-conscious around the generational wealth at Derrymore, where students treat laptops as disposable and weekend spending is limited only by imagination and audacity. Most fascinating to Lilah is Emery herself: an Asian girl who is somehow wholly comfortable in a white world.

When Emery realizes that her family's status and money can't completely shield her from being othered, Lilah and Emery develop a complicated friendship that tentatively unites them against the undercurrent of white privilege at Derrymore. As she speeds toward graduation and Ivy League applications,  Emery circles around the truth that irrevocably separates her from Lilah: 

If you rich right, consequences are optional.

1145594102
To Have and Have More

"There's no such thing as a nice rich kid."

Told through the eyes of a Korean girl adopted into a wealthy white family, this darkly funny debut explores casual racism, privilege, and the vicious twists of friendship. 

Derrymore Academy is home to teenagers who have their eyebrows shaped and their sweet sixteens tented. Their first kisses arrive around the same time as their boating licenses and they celebrate getting their braces off with Mediterranean vacations. It is here that Emery Hooper, fluent in private school and country club mores, thrives.

The one blight on Emery's otherwise perfect life? Lilah Chang. The Chinese-American student is the embarrassing epitome of every Asian stereotype Emery despises. Lilah is both astounded and hopelessly self-conscious around the generational wealth at Derrymore, where students treat laptops as disposable and weekend spending is limited only by imagination and audacity. Most fascinating to Lilah is Emery herself: an Asian girl who is somehow wholly comfortable in a white world.

When Emery realizes that her family's status and money can't completely shield her from being othered, Lilah and Emery develop a complicated friendship that tentatively unites them against the undercurrent of white privilege at Derrymore. As she speeds toward graduation and Ivy League applications,  Emery circles around the truth that irrevocably separates her from Lilah: 

If you rich right, consequences are optional.

12.99 In Stock
To Have and Have More

To Have and Have More

by Sanibel
To Have and Have More

To Have and Have More

by Sanibel

eBook

$12.99 

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Overview

"There's no such thing as a nice rich kid."

Told through the eyes of a Korean girl adopted into a wealthy white family, this darkly funny debut explores casual racism, privilege, and the vicious twists of friendship. 

Derrymore Academy is home to teenagers who have their eyebrows shaped and their sweet sixteens tented. Their first kisses arrive around the same time as their boating licenses and they celebrate getting their braces off with Mediterranean vacations. It is here that Emery Hooper, fluent in private school and country club mores, thrives.

The one blight on Emery's otherwise perfect life? Lilah Chang. The Chinese-American student is the embarrassing epitome of every Asian stereotype Emery despises. Lilah is both astounded and hopelessly self-conscious around the generational wealth at Derrymore, where students treat laptops as disposable and weekend spending is limited only by imagination and audacity. Most fascinating to Lilah is Emery herself: an Asian girl who is somehow wholly comfortable in a white world.

When Emery realizes that her family's status and money can't completely shield her from being othered, Lilah and Emery develop a complicated friendship that tentatively unites them against the undercurrent of white privilege at Derrymore. As she speeds toward graduation and Ivy League applications,  Emery circles around the truth that irrevocably separates her from Lilah: 

If you rich right, consequences are optional.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940181745902
Publisher: Sad Rich Girl Press
Publication date: 04/15/2025
Sold by: Draft2Digital
Format: eBook
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Sanibel grew up in Princeton and studied Classics at the University of Pennsylvania before getting her MFA at The New School. Her essays appear in New York, Air Mail, ELLE, and Lit Hub. She lives in Greenwich Village with her husband and is currently working on a satirical reimagining of The Odyssey from Athena's POV.
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