The Roanoke girls A novel

Amy Engel

Book - 2017

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Subjects
Genres
Suspense fiction
Published
New York : Crown Publishers [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Amy Engel (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
277 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9781101906668
Contents unavailable.
Review by New York Times Review

This first foray into adult fiction by a young adult novelist has a family tree worthy of Greek tragedy. Yates Roanoke, a Kansas oil baron and family patriarch, is a predator who has had sex with his sisters and female descendants, creating a monstrous genealogical heritage in which daughters might be nieces, sisters cousins and granddaughters actually daughters. As the narrative moves back and forth in time, the secrets of these tangled relationships are gradually revealed - most notably when Yates's adult granddaughter Allegra goes missing and he summons home her cousin Lane, who left Roanoke as a teenager, to help in the search. As vile as Yates's transgressions are, their repugnance pales in comparison to Engel's portrayal of the Roanoke girls, who seem to crave his attention. Even Lane, the novel's central narrator and seemingly the least emotionally scarred, fondly recalls the time when, as a teenager, she churned ice cream with Granddad as he gripped her thigh, his "pinkie slipping under the edge of my jean shorts." Upon her return to Roanoke, Lane feels "dismayed by how much my body wants to keep moving in his direction, sit beside him, rest my head on his shoulder." Worse, in a flashback chapter, Lane's mother, Camilla, pictures her organs "turning black and rotten, even as she keened with pleasure" during a "dark, twisting horror show of love." The novel's grotesquerie is somewhat mitigated by the banality of its prose. Characters' eyes "wink," "twinkle," "sparkle," "spark" with "mischief" and, somewhat alarmingly, "bounce." Lane's high school boyfriend, Cooper, with whom she rekindles a romance, has blond hair "darkened to the color of winter wheat" and a cigarette that "dangles negligently from the corner of his mouth." When they meet, "his golden brown eyes study me with plenty of fire but very little warmth." A Gothic tale, contemporary bodice ripper, mystery story and supermarket tabloid feature rolled into one, "The Roanoke Girls" may be shocking in its premise, but ultimately it offers few surprises. ABIGAIL MEISEL teaches writing at the University of Mississippi.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [January 1, 2017]
Review by Booklist Review

After her mother commits suicide, 16-year-old Lane Roanoke moves from New York to Osage Flats, Kansas, to live with her grandparents and her cousin Allegra. Both girls' mothers left Lane's grandparents years earlier. Over the course of the summer, Lane and Allegra explore their places in the line of Roanoke girls their mothers, aunts, and grandmother who all lived in Osage Flats. Soon, Lane uncovers the reason her mother fled the family and runs away herself, abandoning Allegra. Ten years later, her grandfather calls to tell her that Allegra is missing. Lane returns to confront her tangled past and search for her beloved cousin. Engel tells Lane's story in chapters that alternate between Then and Now and includes single chapters from each of the other Roanoke girls. The story is partially a modern mystery and partially an exploration of traumatic family dynamics and the nature of love. In Engel's (The Book of Ivy, 2014) first novel for adults, she succeeds in creating an emotionally captivating story that will leave readers reaching for her earlier, young adult work.--Chanoux, Laura Copyright 2017 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

YA author Engel (The Book of Ivy) makes her adult debut with a gripping if creepy thriller set on the Kansas prairie. Lane Roanoke fervently hoped she had seen the last of Roanoke, the family homestead, when she fled Kansas for Los Angeles as a desperate 16-year-old, but now a decade later the disappearance of her cousin Allegra, the only kin to whom she feels a connection, compels her to return against her better judgment. Indeed, with local law enforcement stymied, it seems that the only hope of solving the mystery lies with Lane and whatever clues she can dredge up from memories of the traumatic summer the two cousins shared as teens. Skipping lightly between past and present, including Lane's efforts to finally come to terms with the two most influential men in her life-dangerously seductive family patriarch Yates and roguish Cooper Sullivan, her never-forgotten first love-this gothic page-turner speeds inexorably toward the kinds of devastating revelations readers won't soon forget. Agent: Jodi Reamer, Writers House. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

When 15-year-old Lane Roanoke is sent to live with her grandparents and her cousin Allegra in their rambling Kansas mansion, she secretly hopes she'll finally find the sense of home and family she never had with her own mother. Instead, she uncovers secrets darker and more dangerous than she could ever have imagined. Ten years later, Lane is drawn back to the family home to help solve the mystery of Allegra's disappearance. Alternating between the narrative present and Lane's first summer in Kansas, Engel (The Book of Ivy) skillfully builds suspense and unfolds mysteries bit by bit. The vivid characters are made all the more complex by the horrors they're sucked into, and even the lighter notes of the novel-first loves, rekindled relationships-are tainted with the darkness that threatens to engulf them all. Tension runs through the novel from beginning to end and teases out the basic human emotions-guilt, love, jealousy, and fear. The themes and characters come to life through Brittany Pressley's gifted narration. She uses a thoughtful and straightforward tone the reader can imagine coming directly from Lane herself. -VERDICT Surprisingly easy to listen to despite its dark subject matter, this gripping work is a definite recommendation for fans of mystery, romance, and coming-of-age novels. ["Atmospheric and unsettling tale of the secrets and bonds of family, set against the backdrop of small-town Kansas": LJ 12/16 review of the Crown hc.]-Samantha Facciolo, New York © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Prologue  The first time I saw Roanoke was in a dream. I knew little of it beyond its name and the fact it was in Kansas, a place I had never been. My mother only ever mentioned it when she'd had too much wine, her breath turned sweet and her words slow and syrupy like molasses. So my subconscious filled in the rest. In my dream it stood tall and stately, tucked among a forest of spring-green trees. Its red-brick facade was broken up by black shutters, white trim, delicate wrought-iron balconies. A little girl's fantasy of a princess castle. When I woke, I started to tell my mother about it. Talking through a mouthful of stale Cheerios drowned in just-this-side-of-sour milk. I got only as far as the name, Roanoke, before she stopped me. "It was nothing like that," she said, voice flat. She was sitting on the wide windowsill, knees drawn up into her cotton nightgown, smoke from her cigarette gathered around her like a shroud. Her ragged toenails dug into the wooden window frame. "You didn't even let me tell you," I whined. "Did you wake up screaming?" A dribble of milk ran down my chin. "Huh?" She turned and glanced at me then, her skin pale, eyes red-rimmed.The bones of her face looked sharp enough to cut. "Was it a nightmare?" I shook my head, confused and a little scared. "No."She looked back out the window. "Then it was nothing like that." Excerpted from The Roanoke Girls: A Novel by Amy Engel All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.