Book description
The haunting young adult gothic romance classic that launched Virginia Andrews' incredible best-selling career.
Up in the attic, four secrets are hidden. Four blonde, beautiful, innocent little secrets, struggling to stay alive...
Chris, Cathy, Cory and Carrie have perfect lives - until a tragic accident changes everything. Now they mustā¦
Why read it?
5 authors picked Flowers in the Attic as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?
I read this book more than thirty years ago, shortly after it was first published.
The story is incredibly twisted and engaging. It features a loving mother who turns greedy and selfish, a very religious grandmother who hates her own daughter, and a grandfather who wonāt die, which raises hopes for the mother and children. After the mother's husband dies, she moves her kids to Virginia to live with her parents, where the children are kept hidden away. Their grandmother, who is cruel and hateful, brings them meals but allows them no freedom or love. The attic they stay inā¦
From Eder's list on motivation through the power of the human spirit.
I read this book in high school and it messed. Me. Up. So much so that I remember it in vivid detail to this day and credit it with my desire to write dysfunctional family fiction.
Iād be hard-pressed in real life (thank God) to find a family suffering from issues ranging from incestuous relationships through moral superiority and unforgiving rigidity up to greed and murder⦠all of which feels like the tip of the iceberg.
Reading the tale of a family who has gone so far off the rails will, if nothing else, make you appreciate the mundaneā¦
From Staci's list on dysfunctional family drama to make you feel better.
In my school, a dog-eared copy of the completely messed-up and horrifying Flowers In The Attic was passed around as contraband. We were not allowed to read it, which, of course, added to the appeal.
Many people find the character of āthe grandmotherā of the kids locked up in the attic pretty terrifying. But for me, Corinne, their weak and stupid mother, is the true villain of the story.
The slow betrayal she indulges in, as her children lose out to her desire for social acceptance and the high life is utterly heartbreaking.
If you like a very sick storyā¦
From Abigail's list on terrifying female villains.
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The maternal figures in this story rival Hansel and Gretelās witch.
When Corrine Dollangangerās husband dies in an accident, she returns to the familial home in the hopes of willing back her fatherās affection and her inheritance.
Corrineās father disapproved of what he considered an incestuous marriage and so she conspires with her mother to hide the existence of her four children by locking them away in the attic.
Itās supposed to be a short-term solution until her elderly father dies, but the children discover their mother and grandmother might never plan on letting them out.
From Katherine's list on surviving your family if they're trying to kill you.
This is a book about a mother who hides her children away from her new husband so that she can win an inheritance.
I read the book when I was at an age I believed all mothers loved their children selflessly so the story of a mother betraying her children traumatised me. I sobbed my way through it and recall my younger brother asking me why I just didnāt put the book down if it was making me so sad. It was a question to which to date I have no answer.Ā Although it was fiction because of the wayā¦
From Ellen's list on about childhood that make you cry.
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