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2 primary booksAudrina is a 2-book series with 2 primary works first released in 1982 with contributions by V.C. Andrews.
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This is my first V.C. Andrews experience. I watched one version of the Flowers In The Attic movie a long time ago, but this is the first I've read of her. I picked this up on the recommendation of MFM, and specifically for the prompt Recommended by Your Favorite Podcast/Vlog/Blog on the PopSugar Reading Challenge for 2020.
It's hard not to be spoilery but I'm gonna do my best because there are plenty of spoiler filled reviews on here. I don't believe in guilty pleasures (as I've said before), but if guilty pleasure was a genre of book, that's what My Sweet Audrina would be. The story starts with Audrina as a seven year old girl living at her family's estate, Whitefern. Her older sister, the First and Best Audrina, was killed on her ninth birthday in the woods next to their home. This Audrina, the Second and Worst Audrina, is therefore always cautioned to stay out of the woods. She has what she calls a “swiss cheese memory” with random holes and things unknown to her. She lives with her mom, dad, aunt, and cousin. They're all strange and elusive. We follow Audrina as she grows to be in her mid-20s and she's trying to fill in the pieces of her memory.
Doesn't sound like a Jerry Springer plot, but oh, it is. The cast of characters grows and develops, with us finding out more and more and EVEN MORE family secrets up until the very last page. So many times while reading this, I stopped, looked up at my husband, and said, “This is bonkers.” Unfortunately, I felt like the big plot twist and secret was pretty obvious from the very beginning, which is why I gave this four stars. But the writing moved along quickly and kept me entertained.
Would I recommend?
Definitely look up trigger warnings because there are some big ones that I'm not going to list, but they're easy to find on here or elsewhere. Otherwise, if you want an entertaining trashy mystery family secret book, YES. I'm definitely going to be reading some of her other books.
I used to love this book when I was a youngish teenager, the combination of Gothic elements, mystery, revenge, and suspense made it irresistible. Possibly I was more into it than Andrew's more popular Flowers in the Attic. Certainly My Sweet Audrina is just as good. I reread it many times, still enjoying it even once I knew the big secret.
Audrina is the narrator and protagonist of the story, living under the shadow of her brighter and better older sister, now diseased. It is a dark atmosphere indeed that Andrews created, perfect for the Gothic genre. Audrina's living in a mansion, known as Whitefern, but far from luxurious, it is run down from neglect, full of inadequate lighting, a dangerous staircase, and—in the case of her dead sister's bedroom—creepy dolls and spider webs. If that weren't enough, there's always the stormy weather happening in key moments throughout the book.
The major conflict for Audrina is one of memory and identity, with Audrina lacking a sense of her past and always wishing to be like her older sister, Audrina, who family speaks of as being so “special.” Unaware she is the victim of, among other things, a huge gaslighting plot, she never even knows the time, the day, nor is she allowed to attend school (Unsubtly, the main rooms in Whitefern are lit by gaslight.)
“There were shadows in the corners and whispers on the stairs and time was as irrelevant as honesty.”
In retrospect, the big reveal of the book seems obvious. Did Audrina not think it was weird that she had the same birthday, same name, same appearance as her long dead sister? The first time I read this, I admit I accepted it entirely, so complete was the gaslighting and so sympathetic was young Audrina's narration. The main mystery of the book is psychologically fascinating, if you can suspend your disbelief.
Adding to Aurdina's problems is the dynamic of constant tension between her parents, between her mom and her aunt, and between everyone and Audrina's wild and willful cousin, Vera. High, overwrought emotions, secrets and revenge add to the gothic atmosphere and romantic and sexual jealousy, as well as a general obsession/repulsion about sex give My Sweet Audrina its spice. A lot of this is man/woman battle of the sexes stuff: Mom gave up her career to be a wife, Aunt Elspeth has secret feelings for Dad, and just who is Vera's father anyway? Kinda soapy but compulsively readable.
“There was a war going on in our house, a silent war that sounded no guns, and the bodies that fell were only wishes that died and the bullets were only words and the blood that was spilled was always called pride.”
The secondary revenge plot is pretty good too, and Andrews plays a long game with it, including a bit of misdirection. Audrina's father is apparently the heavy, pitting all the women against each other for his love and keeping Audrina tightly under his control through fear, guilt, and affection. Yet, it all comes down to the women making decisions and taking action—and since this is a bit of a melodrama, a bit of a dark fantasy—they mostly make the wrong ones. It's notable that nothing big happens in this book that wasn't the result of action or machinations of one of the female characters. Maybe that was another reason that this and all VC Andrews works meant so much to me at the time.
YIKES THO
http://www.frowl.org/worstbestsellers/episode-108-my-sweet-audrina/
the shark boy and lava girl of (mystery? romance? idek what genre this is)