Ratings2
Average rating4.5
A NEW YORK TIMES EDITORS’ CHOICE • From the author of the award-winning debut story collection We Show What We Have Learned, an "atoundingly original” (The New York Times Book Review) work of historical fiction with shocking and eerie connections to our own time. At their newly founded school, Samuel Hood and his daughter, Caroline, promise a groundbreaking education for young women. But Caroline has grave misgivings. After all, her own unconventional education has left her unmarriageable and isolated, unsuited to the narrow roles afforded women in nineteenth-century New England. When a mysterious flock of red birds descends on the town, Caroline alone seems to find them unsettling. But it’s not long before the assembled students begin to manifest bizarre symptoms: rashes, seizures, headaches, verbal tics, night wanderings. One by one, they sicken. Fearing ruin for the school, Samuel overrules Caroline’s pleas to inform the girls’ parents and turns instead to a noted physician, a man whose sinister ministrations—based on a shocking historic treatment—horrify Caroline. As the men around her continue to dictate, disastrously, all terms of the girls’ experience, Caroline’s own body begins to betray her. To save herself and her young charges, she will have to defy every rule that has governed her life, her mind, her body, and her world.
Reviews with the most likes.
Stunning. I will have to reread to get everything out of it–it's rich like that. Caroline and Samuel and Daniel are such complex characters. The rage against the patriarchy is so intricately, quietly built and rippling. But I wish there had been a trigger warning for sexual assault–that bit was truly horrifying.
Written in the style of Dickens, Waugh, Alcott - this harrowing tale of young girls at a forward-thinking boarding school who are caught up in feelings that are labelled hysteria by a medical doctor, told through the perspective of the young female teacher whose father runs the school. Reminiscent of the movie Picnic at Hanging Rock and the play The Crucible.