The Ruins
Books | Fiction / Gothic
Phoebe Wynne
A suspenseful, contemporary Gothic coming-of-age tale with shades of Patricia Highsmith and Atonement, pitched against the sun-soaked backdrop of the French Riviera.The most dazzling summer casts the darkest shadows.Welcome to the Chateau des Sètes, a jewel of the Cote d’Azur, where long summer days bring ease, glamour, and decadence to the holidaymakers who can afford it.Ruby Ashby adores her parents’ house in France, but this August, everything feels different. Unexpected guests have descended upon the chateau––friends of her parents, and their daughters—and they are keen to enjoy the hot, extravagant summer holiday to its fullest potential. Far from England, safe in their wealth and privilege, the adults revel in bad behavior without consequence, while the girls are treated as playthings or abandoned to their own devices. But despite languid days spent poolside and long nights spent drinking, a simmering tension is growing between the families, and the sanctuary that Ruby cherishes soon starts to feel like a gilded cage.Over two decades later the chateau is for sale, its days of splendor and luxury long gone, leaving behind a terrible history and an ugly legacy. A young widow has returned to France, wanting to purchase the chateau, despite her shocking memories of what transpired that fateful summer. But there is another person who is equally haunted by the chateau, and who also seeks to reclaim it. Who will set the chateau free––and who will become yet another of its victims?With riveting psychological complexity, The Ruins captures the tangled legacy of abuse, the glittering allure of the Mediterranean––and the dark shadows that wait beneath the surface of both.
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Author
Phoebe Wynne
Pages
336
Publisher
St. Martin's Publishing Group
Published Date
2022-07-05
ISBN
1250272076 9781250272072
Community ReviewsSee all
"Really wish I hadn’t forced myself to finish this. Lots of girls being forced to sit on men’s laps and possibly rape and then finally murder. Writing was terrible and it was a slog to get through and I know the author was trying to show how so many of us were forced to go through things like that but the story was torture in itself."
"Set in the 80s, this story is dark and disturbing. Follows 3 young girls from affluent English families vacationing at a Chatteau in France. The girls are sexually molested under the nose of their parents. Listened to the audiobook, the narrator was excellent. This story is told gently from the child's perspective. I don't like reading stories about this subject but this author did a masterful job in not chasing away the sensitive reader. Thank you."
"I won this book as an ARC in a Goodreads giveaway. This book single-handedly had me wishing that books had trigger warnings. <br/><br/>As other reviewers mentioned, the back cover copy was misleading. "When unexpected guests arrive, simmering tension grows between the parents and their adolescent daughters." I anticipated the average throes of adolescence: learning to break the rules and becoming different people from their parents. I didn't expect to read about the physical and sexual abuse of the young girls and the inaction of their parents to protect them; the abuse goes unnoticed or worse unacknowledged. One of the girls is made to believe she is dirty and damaged goods, and the novel never resolves this and never sees her realize it isn't true. That, in particular, felt inappropriate to leave unaddressed. Wynne's writing made each scene feel graphic despite the fact the abuse was rarely graphic in the literal sense. It was incredibly disturbing. If I had known the true nature of the book, I would not have entered the giveaway. <br/><br/>On more minor notes, the line "Two guests from that fateful summer have returned to stake their claim" from the back cover is false because one of the individuals was not actually a guest that summer. As another reviewer mentioned, the time period of the '80s was unbelievable, feeling more like somewhere between the 1920s-1950s. While the reveal that the future narrator was Imogen and not Ruby was impressive, the future narrative didn't add any relief to the ending. There is no resolution and only more unexamined trauma. <br/><br/>While Wynne's descriptive diction is admirable, I am giving this three stars for being misleading in relation to disturbing and triggering material and leaving the events (and in some way the characters) unresolved."
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Kayla Randolph
"Really disturbing. And not in like a fun, Gone Girl kinda way — in like a (TW) child abuse, neglect, grooming and SA kind of way. The writing was good and the twists were also well-executed, but it was a bit slow at points. Overall, I wouldn’t recommend it, especially for those with childhood trauma, as it’s just a book about adults repeatedly and gratuitously hurting or passively allowing hurt to come upon children. The ending also didn’t wrap it up very well, in my opinion."