The Schoolhouse
'Stylish, pacy and genuinely frightening' The Times
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- 4,49 €
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- 4,49 €
Publisher Description
'A compelling, fast-moving narrative . . . delivers real emotional impact' Telegraph
'A literary provocateur' Guardian
SHORTLISTED for the POLARI PRIZE 2023
WINNER of DIVA Magazine's 2023 'Author of the Year' Award
Isobel lives an isolated life in North London, where she works at a nearby library. She feels safe, so long as she keeps to her routines and doesn't let her thoughts stray too far into the past. But a newspaper photograph of a missing local schoolgirl and a letter from her old teacher send her spiralling and bring back the trauma of what happened years ago, when she was a pupil at The Schoolhouse.
The Schoolhouse was a 1970s experimental school where Isobel's days were a dark interplay of freedom and adventure, violence and fear. The only record of what happened there lies in the pages of her teenage diary.
The Schoolhouse taught Isobel that some truths must never be revealed, but as police investigating the missing girl start to ask uncomfortable questions, she realises the truth is coming for her - and it will put her, and everyone she has tried to protect, at risk.
From the Booker Prize-longlisted author of Love and Other Thought Experiments comes a masterful and gripping thriller about truth, silence, and the dead weight of the past.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
London librarian Isobel Williams, the heroine of this superlative psychological thriller from Ward (Love and Other Thought Experiments), is haunted by her years at the Schoolhouse, an unconventional school with a dangerous mix of lofty goals, lax supervision, and volatile students. Though she left the Schoolhouse in 1975, Isobel remains fearful of close attachments and is reliant on carefully ordered routines to keep her memories of it at bay. In 1990, she receives an unexpected letter from one of her Schoolhouse teachers, who asks to see her and mentions a former classmate Isobel has tried to forget. The same day the letter arrives, she notices two school-age girls in the university research library where she works. Children are unusual there, but Isobel isn't concerned until she sees a newspaper photograph of missing 10-year-old Caitlin Thompson. Det. Sgt. Sally Carter, who's investigating the disappearance, questions Isobel's story: Caitlin vanished the night before Isobel claims to have seen her, and no other schoolgirl was involved. As Carter doggedly works the case, Isobel's past gives rise to new peril. Passages from Isobel's childhood diary punctuate the women's adult perspectives, perfectly balancing nuanced emotion and riveting suspense. This is not to be missed.