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Wildthorn

350p. 978-0-54737-017-0.
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Gr 9-Up Then 17-year-old Louisa Cosgrove arrives at England's Wildthorn Hall, her world suddenly turns upside down. She is told that she's sick and that her name is Lucy Childs. When she protests, she is told, "Thinking you are someone else and thinking you are not ill are signs of how sick you are. You are lucky that you are here where we have the skill to cure you." With these words, her nightmare begins. Louisa tells her story herself, therefore pulling readers into her harrowing experience in the asylum. Eagland skillfully fills in backstory by having Louisa narrate the events that led up to her confinement. She recalls her early childhood and how her father encouraged her study of medicine, while her mother entreated her to conform to 19th-century expectations for her gender. These memories alternate with her current experiences and cruel treatment in the hospital. In fact, the author manages to plant a seed of doubt as to whether Louisa is really who she says and believes she is. Eagland does a beautiful job of depicting the "real" Louisa in the end, with an unusual twist on the conventional romantic denouement. Teens will identify with her frustration at not being believed, be horrified by how she is mistreated, feel relief about her daring escape, and learn a great deal about life in a 19th-century "mad house." Modern readers may find it difficult to accept the reason for her being locked up, but most teens will stick with Louisa's story until the end.-"Wendy Scalfaro, G. Ray Bodley High School, Fulton, NY" Copyright 2010 Media Source Inc.
Ambitious seventeen-year-old Louisa longs to become a doctor. Her dream dims as she finds herself incarcerated in a Victorian insane asylum. With the help of servant Eliza escape becomes a possibility, but the romantic love growing between the two girls presents another danger. Although the mystery of who ordered Louisa's incarceration is well wrought, her modern attitudes and self-confidence sap some tension from the story.

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