Garden of Shadows
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First edition cover |
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Author | Virginia C. Andrews |
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Country | United States |
Language | English |
Series | Dollanganger series |
Genre(s) | Gothic horror Family saga |
Publisher | Simon & Schuster |
Released | 1986 |
Media type | |
Pages | 384 |
ISBN | 067172942X (1990 reissue) |
Preceded by | Seeds of Yesterday (1984) |
Garden of Shadows is a novel by Virginia C. Andrews and was first. published in 1987. V.C. Andrews, of course, died in 1986, and her estate has commissioned a ghostwriter, Andrew Neiderman, to continue churning out novels in her name, typically developed from plot outlines originally written by Andrews. There is some dispute over whether this particular novel was written in part by Andrews before she died, or whether it was written entirely by Niederman. In any event, this is the fifth and final novel of the Dollanganger series. It explains the lives of Olivia Winfield (the grandmother from Flowers in the Attic) and Corrine's marriage.
[edit] Plot
The story starts with gangly plain Olivia being rescued from spinsterhood by the smart and handsome Malcolm Foxworth. They soon get married and move to Foxworth Hall where Olivia starts to discover the dark secrets about Malcolm that start to kill her love for him.
She discovers he is still tormented because his beautiful mother Corrine "abandoned" him when he was five and that it was Olivia's plain looks and money that attracted him to her due to his hatred of beautiful women.
When exploring the house she discovers The Swan Room, which belonged to Malcolm’s mother and has been kept as a shrine to her. When Malcolm discovers her in the room, they finally consummate the marriage, but with Malcolm saying his mother's name the whole time.
Nine months later Olivia gives birth to a boy Malcolm, then Joel. After this she cannot have any more children and Malcolm ignores the boys for the rest of their lives because he can’t have a perfect daughter to remind him that all beautiful women are wicked and deceitful.
Soon Malcolm’s father Garland comes back to Foxworth Hall with his new wife Alicia. Olivia is disgusted to see she is only nineteen and beautiful; and Malcolm is enraged to discover she is pregnant with a boy Christopher, but falls in love with her. When she spurns his advances he is convinced she is leading him on and vows to make her pay dearly.
On the night of Christopher’s third birthday, Garland catches Malcolm trying to rape Alicia, has a heart attack and dies in the fight that follows. Then Alicia confesses to Olivia that that Malcolm has been doing this regularly and she is pregnant again. Olivia is humiliated and jealous and this is the moment when she hardens herself and becomes more like the grandmother from Flowers in the Attic.
Olivia decides that the only thing do to do is to hide Alicia up in the attic while she is pregnant and then pass the baby off as hers. Alicia reluctantly says goodbye to Christopher and lets Olivia cut off her beautiful auburn hair, which she leaves on Malcolm’s desk to show that she’s in charge now.
Over the months that pass, Olivia begins to think of Christopher as her new son and is heartbroken when Alicia leaves quietly taking Christopher with her but is soon enraged when she discovers Malcolm has named the new child Corrine and plans for her nursery to be next to his study.
In the years that pass, Corrine grows up into a beautiful but spoiled young girl and Malcolm Jr., then Joel are killed in tragic accidents. Olivia and Malcolm turn to religion and bond slightly until Olivia receives a letter from the dying Alicia, pleading with her to give Christopher a home and put him through college. Olivia convinces Malcolm, and Christopher comes to live with them. When they meet for the first time, Corrine and Christopher fall deeply in love and are banished from the house when Olivia discovers them making love in the Swan Room.
Years later Corrine comes back to Foxworth Hall with her children Cathy, Chris, Cory and Carrie, which is where the book finishes. One glaring inconsistency with the earlier novel Flowers in the Attic is the description of how a light snow was beginning to fall when Corinne and her children arrived.
[edit] Errors
- However, in Flowers in the Attic, Corinne and her four children arrive at Foxworth Hall in the month of August.
- In Flowers in the Attic, Corrine tells her children that she eloped with Christopher Sr. and they married, and came back to Foxworth Hall. In this book, her parents caught her and Christopher Sr. in bed together, where they then were banished.
- The Doll house that belongs to Olivia stays at her old house. There is no mention of it ever arriving at Foxworth Hall, as it does in Flowers in the Attic.
[edit] References
- Andrews, V. C. (1987). Garden of Shadows. Simon and Schuster, 384 pp.. ISBN 0-671-72942-X.
- Andrews, V. C. (1984). Seeds of Yesterday. Simon and Schuster, 426 pp.. ISBN 0-671-72948-9.
- Andrews, V. C. (1981). If There Be Thorns. Simon and Schuster, 384 pp.. ISBN 0-671-72945-4.
- Andrews, V. C. (1980). Petals on the Wind. Simon and Schuster, 448 pp.. ISBN 0-671-72947-0.
- Andrews, V. C. (1979). Flowers in the Attic. Simon and Schuster, 412 pp.. ISBN 0-671-41124-1.