Hopefully there’s a chapter on legal trouble!

One of the wealthy moms accused in the college admissions bribery scam is a Beverly Hills-based marketing CEO who once penned a book called, “The Modern Girl’s Guide to Sticky Situations.”

Jane Buckingham, 50 — who runs the boutique marketing firm Trendra — allegedly agreed to make a $50,000 “charitable donation” in exchange for having a professional take the ACT for her son in July 2018, according to the criminal complaint.

But before she was busted in the cheating scam the former Cosmopolitan magazine contributor wrote a 2010 book, which bills itself as, “a handbook for surviving headaches, pickles, jams, and everyday emergencies,” according to the Amazon.com.

“Buckingham dispenses savvy solutions to life’s myriad little annoyances with warmth, great wit, and impeccable wisdom,” the book description notes.

The Horace Mann and Duke grad may now need some of her own advice.

The marketing big wig and self help guru is facing federal charges for her role in the scheme, which was laid out in court papers in which she made it clear she thought getting her son into college was on the same level as peace in the Middle East.

“I know this is craziness, I know it is,” she told alleged plot organizer William Singer according to a conversation detailed in court papers. “And then I need you to get him into USC, and then I need you to cure cancer and [make peace] in the Middle East.”

In a criminal complaint, authorities say she schemed with Singer to hire a test taker from Florida.

Singer, identified in papers as CW-1, tells Buckingham, “Okay, so your donation is gonna be 50” in exchange for having the professional take the test.

“Okay,” she replies.

Five days before the test taker was scheduled to cheat for her son, the adviser called to request a handwriting sample from her son, so he could fake it.

Buckingham replies, “Yes. He has not great writing.”

She later sent the adviser an emailed sample of her son’s chicken scratch and a note reading, “good luck with this.”

Her son, who is not named in the criminal complaint, later received a score of 35 on the test. It wasn’t clear where he went to college.

Buckingham later told the adviser she would “probably like to do the same thing with [my daughter].”

In addition to being an executive, Buckingham is a Southern California socialite who last Saturday co-hosted a fundraiser for Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, who is running for president. Other hosts included comedian Will Ferrell and TV producer Shonda Rhimes.

Buckingham did not return calls for comment.