Emily’s chapters are characterized by water imagery—chlorine pools, ocean waves—which function as symbols of submersion and hidden depth. Her “flaw” is the most unjustly assigned, yet she internalizes it as shame. When “A” almost succeeds in exposing her to her mother, Emily contemplates suicide. This is the novel’s darkest turn, revealing that “A’s” power lies not in physical harm but in the demolition of the closet door. Shepard argues that for a queer teen in a wealthy, conservative suburb, the loss of a secret can feel like the loss of self.
Similarly, Aria’s relationship with her English teacher, Ezra Fitz, escalates in secrecy. When Ezra’s ex-fiancée, Meredith, returns, Aria is forced to see herself from the outside: not as a mature romantic heroine but as a cliché. Shepard’s prose emphasizes clothing and staging—Aria’s fishnets, Hanna’s Juicy Couture sweatsuits—to show that the self is a costume. “A” threatens to rip that costume off. The novel’s title, Flawless , is thus ironic: the only flawless person is a dead one (Alison) or an invisible one (“A”). The living girls are defined by their cracks.
Gill, Rosalind. “Postfeminist Media Culture: Elements of a Sensibility.” European Journal of Cultural Studies , vol. 10, no. 2, 2007, pp. 147–166. (Applied to analysis of Hanna’s body commodification)
In the ecology of young adult thrillers, the secret is the central organism. Sara Shepard’s Flawless opens with an implicit understanding: the four protagonists survived the disappearance of their queen bee, Alison DiLaurentis, but they did not survive her legacy. Building directly on the revelation that “A”—an anonymous texter who knows their every lie—is still hunting them, Book 2 deepens the series’ central thesis: in an environment of extreme social scrutiny, the most dangerous predator is not a single stalker but the compulsion to appear perfect. This paper dissects how Flawless transforms the thriller genre into a mirror reflecting the anxieties of adolescent girlhood under surveillance. pretty little liars book 2
Talley, Heather Laine. “Girls Gone Skank: The Sexualization of Girls in American Culture.” Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy , vol. 54, no. 4, 2010, pp. 294–296. (Applied to analysis of Aria’s relationship with Ezra)
Hanna Marin’s arc in Flawless is the most medically graphic. After being hit by a car in Book 1, she undergoes reconstructive surgery. Shepard does not sentimentalize recovery; instead, Hanna equates her healing with visibility. She measures her worth by how many boys look at her, how quickly the scar fades. “A” exploits this by threatening to release her hospital photos—vulnerable, intubated, unglamorous—to the entire school.
Contemporary Young Adult Fiction and the Culture of Secrecy Date: [Current Date] This is the novel’s darkest turn, revealing that
Sara Shepard’s second installment in the Pretty Little Liars series, Flawless (2009), functions not merely as a continuation of a mystery narrative but as a sophisticated exploration of post-traumatic identity and performative perfection among suburban adolescents. This paper argues that Flawless utilizes the anonymous antagonist “A” as a panoptic instrument, forcing protagonists Spencer Hastings, Aria Montgomery, Hanna Marin, and Emily Fields to confront the fissures between their public facades and private traumas. Through an analysis of doubling, epistolary threat, and the commodification of female bodies, this essay demonstrates how Shepard critiques the pathology of upper-class Rosewood, Pennsylvania, where secrecy becomes currency and flawlessness becomes a prison.
Michel Foucault’s concept of the panopticon—a disciplinary mechanism where inmates internalize the possibility of being watched at any moment—finds a literal application in Flawless . “A” does not need to be omnipresent; the protagonists only need to believe “A” could be anywhere.
Unlike Book 1’s relatively scattered threats, Flawless sharpens “A” into a precise weapon. When Hanna attempts to maintain her new thin, popular identity, “A” texts her: “I saw you eat that breadstick. Too bad lipo doesn’t work on carb bloat” (Shepard, ch. 4). The threat is not merely exposure of past crimes (the Jenna Thing, the affair with Ezra) but the disruption of ongoing performance. The girls begin to self-censor in their own bedrooms, whispering instead of speaking, checking phones with dread. Shepard argues that external surveillance rapidly internalizes into self-surveillance—the hallmark of neoliberal girlhood. The Liars are not afraid of “A” catching them; they are afraid of “A” showing them who they really are. When Ezra’s ex-fiancée, Meredith, returns, Aria is forced
Flawless concludes with no resolution. “A” remains anonymous. Alison’s killer is unnamed. The girls gather in the churchyard where Alison was buried, realizing they are bound tighter by their shared guilt than by any friendship. The final image is Hanna’s phone lighting up with a new text: “A” is watching their grief.
By refusing closure, Shepard makes a structural argument: the condition of being a teenage girl in a culture of perfection is one of permanent suspense. Flawless is not a book about catching a villain; it is a book about realizing that the villain might be the expectation of flawlessness itself. For readers, the horror is not the anonymous texter but the recognition that, under similar pressures, they too would have kept the secrets. The novel’s lasting contribution to young adult literature is its unflinching portrait of how surveillance—whether by “A,” a parent, or a peer—shapes the modern adolescent psyche into a house of mirrors where every reflection is a lie.