I am currently listening to
Teen Idol, by Meg Cabot, via
Audible.com. I love this book, and I really like the audiobook narrator. But. That is not why I am posting.
I think Meg Cabot has a very, very warped sense of scale in towns. She is writing here about a fictional town called Clayton, Indiana. At one point she refers to the fact that the high school (grades 9-12) population is 1200. At another point, she talks about how the town is "really, really small".
The town I grew up in had a single high school with a student population of just over 500, with around 60 of those being bussed in from the local air force base. It wasn't a huge town. I always felt it was kind of a small suburb. It didn't have its own movie theater, whereas most neighboring towns did.
My husband grew up in a town where the student body of the high school is almost exactly 1200, and the population there is 30K. From what I can tell from internet research, 30K is kind of a humungous town, by Indiana standards.
This just bothers me. Every time I listen through the book, I go eye-rolly.