Clearwater Community High School has been doxxed. The dating profiles, sexts, and nudes of 41 faculty members have just been published by a local gossip website, and the school has unexpectedly collapsed into complete chaos. The material includes a cache of damaging emails sent by popular English teacher Andy Waters; a series of embarrassing texts documenting an ill-fated fling between the gym coach and the physics teacher; and a video of young math teacher Jennifer Watson having sex with the father of one of her students. It falls to Principal Vince Darten—one of the few Black administrators in the affluent White town of Clearwater, Indiana—to respond to the area’s outrage while attempting to support his teachers: “The community reaction was apoplectic. Daily, he met with more students and parents than he did aggrieved teachers. Some demanded transfers or teacher removals; one student claimed he no longer felt safe in Orchestra and asked for the music program to be suspended or dissolved.” The revelation that their teachers are flawed, sexual beings comes as quite a shock to the students, as does the invasive police investigation to catch the anonymous leaker. When it becomes clear that the “Clearwater Cloudburst” is not a one-time event, the pressure is on for Vince to stop the madness before the school tears itself apart. Rossi’s fluid prose shadows the interior lives of his large cast of characters, as here with Lana Collins, the school’s transgender French teacher: “Unlike many of her fellow educators, Lana greeted the release of her files with a sense of grim resignation rather than shock or betrayal. Her whole life, she reflected, constituted unwanted, forced exposure.” The premise is inspired, and the author plays it out in a way that allows him to grapple with a number of contemporary social cleavages. What’s more, the book speaks to that much older, deeper fear of having one’s true self revealed before the community. While the plot is overly neat at times, it makes for a fun, thought-provoking read.