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==Controversy==
==Controversy==
The book's success was not without controversy. The discussion of [[incest]] between an adolescent brother and sister in the novel has led to its being [[book banning|banned]] in certain areas at different times. The Richmond High School in [[Rhode Island]] removed it because it contained "offensive passages concerning incest and sexual intercourse." In 1994, it was removed from the Oconee County school libraries due to "the filthiness of the material."<ref> {{cite book |last= Doyle |first= Robert |authorlink= |coauthors= |title= Banned Books Resource Guide |year= 1998|publisher= The American Library Association |location= |isbn= }}</ref>
The book's success was not without controversy. The discussion of [[incest]] between an adolescent brother and sister in the novel has led to its being [[book banning|banned]] in certain areas at different times. The Richmond High School in [[Rhode Island]] removed it because it contained "offensive passages concerning incest and sexual intercourse." In 1994, it was removed from the Oconee County, [[state]] school libraries due to "the filthiness of the material."<ref> {{cite book |last= Doyle |first= Robert |authorlink= |coauthors= |title= Banned Books Resource Guide |year= 1998|publisher= The American Library Association |location= |isbn= }}</ref>


The book was much disputed when the novel was said to be based on a true story. For many years there was no evidence to support this claim and the book was passed off as fiction. Nonetheless, the official V.C. Andrews' website claims to have contacted one of Virginia's relatives. This unidentified relative claimed, "''Flowers in the Attic'' WAS based on a true story. Virginia was a young lady when my dad made arrangements to take Virginia to the University of Virginia hospital for treatment. While she was there, she developed a crush on her young doctor. He and his siblings had been locked away in the attic for over 6 years to preserve the family wealth. Obviously she cut the time back [in her novel] to be more believable. That area of the country has a lot of very wealthy people. I do not know who they were."<ref> {{cite web |url= http://www.completevca.com/bio_truestory.shtml |title= Biography: Based on a True Story |author= |date= |work= |publisher= |accessdate=2010-01-09}}</ref>
The book was much disputed when the novel was said to be based on a true story. For many years there was no evidence to support this claim and the book was passed off as fiction. Nonetheless, the official V.C. Andrews' website claims to have contacted one of Virginia's relatives. This unidentified relative claimed, "''Flowers in the Attic'' WAS based on a true story. Virginia was a young lady when my dad made arrangements to take Virginia to the University of Virginia hospital for treatment. While she was there, she developed a crush on her young doctor. He and his siblings had been locked away in the attic for over 6 years to preserve the family wealth. Obviously she cut the time back [in her novel] to be more believable. That area of the country has a lot of very wealthy people. I do not know who they were."<ref> {{cite web |url= http://www.completevca.com/bio_truestory.shtml |title= Biography: Based on a True Story |author= |date= |work= |publisher= |accessdate=2010-01-09}}</ref>

Revision as of 00:25, 10 January 2011

Flowers in the Attic
Original cover of Flowers in the Attic.
First edition cover of Flowers in the Attic
AuthorV. C. Andrews
LanguageEnglish
SeriesDollanganger series
GenreGothic horror
Family saga
PublisherSimon & Schuster
Publication date
November 1979
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint
Pages400
ISBN0671825313
OCLC21616361
Followed byPetals on the Wind (1980) 

Flowers in the Attic is a 1979 novel by Virginia Andrews. It is the first book in the Dollanganger Series, and was followed by Petals on the Wind, If There Be Thorns, Seeds of Yesterday, and Garden of Shadows. The novel is written in the first person from the point of view of Cathy Dollanganger. It was adapted into a film of the same name in 1987.

Plot summary

Narrator Cathy Dollanganger is twelve years old and the second of four children (following older brother Chris, who is fourteen years old, and preceding twins Cory and Carrie, who are both five years old). Cathy and her siblings live in Gladstone, Pennsylvania, with their father, Christopher and their mother, Corinne. Their idyllic life ends when the father dies in a highway accident on his 36th birthday.

Facing financial destitution, Corrine decides to take her children to Foxworth Hall, her family home in Charlottesville, Virginia. She writes to her mother, Olivia, persuading her to let her and the children stay in the giant mansion. Olivia agrees as long as the children are hidden; she does not want their grandfather, Malcolm, to know about them. Corinne tells the children that her parents are very rich, but were upset with her as they were strong Christians and disowned her when she married her half uncle and so she has not seen them in years. She also relates that their grandfather is dying and if Corinne can earn back his love before his death, she will be the sole heir to a vast fortune. Corinne and her children take a train to a station in the middle of nowhere and walk the remaining distance to Foxworth Hall under cover of darkness.

When the children are settled into a small room below the attic, Corinne leaves with her mother and promises to return the next day. When she returns, she has been savagely horse-whipped by Olivia, who explains to the children that their parents were half-uncle and niece; their father had been Malcolm's half-brother. If Corinne has any hope of gaining her father's approval, the existence of the children must be kept secret. They are told that they must remain in seclusion until Malcolm’s death. Initially, Corinne attends secretarial school so that she can acquire the skills necessary to support her children and get them out of there; however, no references to secretarial school are made after the first year.

At first, Corinne visits them every day and lavishes the children with expensive gifts and promises of a bright future. However, as time goes by, she slowly loses interest in her children, coming less and less often. They are both verbally and emotionally abused by their grandmother, who tells them that they are "the devil's spawn" and "an abomination in the eyes of the Lord." She often threatens them with horrible physical punishment if they disobey her rules. After months of imprisonment Corinne abruptly stops visiting her children, leaving Cathy and Chris to believe that something has happened to her while they have been trapped in the attic.

During Corinne's absence, the children do what they can to pass the time. Cathy practices ballet, and Chris works toward his dreams of becoming a doctor by studying numerous books and text books in the attic. They also try to teach the twins the appropriate school lessons they would have. As the months turn into a year, Corinne’s abandonment forces the children to rely on one another for comfort and friendship. This leads to the formation of a new family unit, with Chris and Cathy assuming the roles of mother and father to the twins.

Cathy and Chris begin to mature and enter puberty. Cathy in particular is curious and unsure about the changes in her body. This leads to an incident where she is admiring her naked self before a mirror. Chris accidentally walks in on her; after getting over the initial shock, he proceeds to stare at her and tell her how beautiful she is becoming. The grandmother comes in and catches Chris watching Cathy, and seems almost triumphant as she calls them sinners. She gives Christopher and Cathy an ultimatum: either Chris must cut off all of Cathy's hair or all four children will be starved for two weeks. When they refuse to comply, Olivia drugs Cathy in her sleep and pours hot tar onto Cathy's hair. The resulting starvation leads the older children to acts of desperation: Chris slashes his wrist so the twins can drink his blood, and skins and guts mice caught in traps for him and Cathy to eat. Before they can eat the mice or put an escape plan into action, their grandmother leaves them a picnic basket of food, along with a new addition of powdered doughnuts. At one point, a mouse gets its forepaw caught in their trap. Cory finds the mouse and wishes to keep it as a pet and name it Mickey. Over the next few weeks, he works to earn Mickey's trust.

Over time, the grandmother continues to abuse the children, and in one incident whips both Cathy and Chris. Corinne does return soon after, revealing that she has remarried to her father's attorney, Bart Winslow, and was away on her honeymoon. As time continues to pass, the two elder siblings, largely due to their confinement, become sexually attracted to each other. They also start to form a plan to escape their prison. They make an impression of their mother's key to their room in soap and carve a wooden copy. To finance their escape, Chris and Cathy began to steal small amounts of money from their Mother and new stepfather's lavish suite. One night, Christopher is ill so Cathy goes alone, only to find her stepfather asleep in a chair. Confused and curious, she kisses him while he sleeps. Days later, Christopher finds out about the kiss when he overhears his stepfather describing the incident in what he thought was a dream. Chris rapes Cathy in a jealous rage. Both are horrified afterward and feel tremendous guilt and shame, but still love each other.

Soon after, Cory becomes mysteriously sick. Corinne promises to take Cory to the hospital. When she returns, she tells the children that Cory has died. Now desperate to escape, Christopher plans to take whatever money and jewelry he can find in his mother's suite, only to discover that Corinne and Bart have left Foxworth Hall. In addition, he discovers that the grandfather has been dead for nine months. He hides from some servants and overhears the butler, John Amos, saying that Olivia has been leaving arsenic-covered food upstairs to kill the mice in the attic; when Chris returns, he tells Cathy he believes this means that their food has been poisoned with arsenic. After testing one of the powdered-sugar doughnuts on their pet mouse Mickey, who dies from the poisoning, Christopher, Cathy and Carrie escape from their imprisonment after three-and-a-half years of captivity. Once they have escaped and are at the train station, Christopher reveals to Cathy the final horror; he had also overhead John talking of the grandfather's will, learning that he was leaving all his money to Corinne on the condition that if it is proven she bore any children from her first marriage or has any in the future, she will be disinherited and lose every penny and all objects purchased with the inherited money. He points out that the poisoned doughnuts started coming with their food right after the grandfather died and the will was read, therefore it was their mother who made the decision to poison them. They toy momentarily with going to the police, but decide against it as they do not want to risk being separated from each other and placed into foster homes—their priority is to get away and make it on their own, always staying together and being there for Carrie. They plan to travel to Sarasota, Florida. At the time of their escape, Christopher is nearly eighteen years old, Cathy is fifteen years old, and Carrie is eight years old. Cathy vows to herself that she has only temporarily given up her thoughts of justice and revenge against her mother and grandmother, and she will see it through one day.

Characters

  • Catherine Leigh "Cathy" Dollanganger: The protagonist and narrator of the novel. Cathy is the second-born of Chris Sr. and Corrine's children. She wants to become a ballerina. In Petals on the Wind, she becomes the mother of Jory and Bart(II)and in If There Be Thorns she also adopts a daughter Cynthia whom they all call Cindy. She is a mother figure to Carrie and Cory.
  • Chris Dollanganger, Jr.: Eldest offspring of Christopher and Corrine, Chris is the older brother of Cathy, Cory, and Carrie. During their time in the attic, he falls in love with Cathy. His life long dream was to become a doctor, like his late father. He is described as being very intelligent.
  • Cory Dollanganger: Twin brother of Carrie and younger brother of Cathy and Chris. He becomes ill during their time in the attic and dies.
  • Carrie Dollanganger: Twin sister to Cory and the younger sister of Cathy and Chris.
  • Corrine Dollanganger (née Foxworth): Mother of Chris, Cathy, Cory, and Carrie and widowed wife of Christopher Dollanganger. Eventually becomes an antagonist in the story. She marries her father's attorney Bart Winslow later on.
  • Olivia Foxworth: The antagonist in the novel, grandmother of the Dollanganger children.
  • Malcom Foxworth: Father of Corrine and grandfather of the Dollanganger children. He dies during the book, though Chris and Cathy don't find out until somewhere near the end.
  • Christopher Dollanganger: Corrine's first husband; father of the children. He is killed in a car accident at the beginning of the book. He was Corrine's half-uncle.
  • John Amos: A butler to the Foxworth family.

Controversy

The book's success was not without controversy. The discussion of incest between an adolescent brother and sister in the novel has led to its being banned in certain areas at different times. The Richmond High School in Rhode Island removed it because it contained "offensive passages concerning incest and sexual intercourse." In 1994, it was removed from the Oconee County, state school libraries due to "the filthiness of the material."[1]

The book was much disputed when the novel was said to be based on a true story. For many years there was no evidence to support this claim and the book was passed off as fiction. Nonetheless, the official V.C. Andrews' website claims to have contacted one of Virginia's relatives. This unidentified relative claimed, "Flowers in the Attic WAS based on a true story. Virginia was a young lady when my dad made arrangements to take Virginia to the University of Virginia hospital for treatment. While she was there, she developed a crush on her young doctor. He and his siblings had been locked away in the attic for over 6 years to preserve the family wealth. Obviously she cut the time back [in her novel] to be more believable. That area of the country has a lot of very wealthy people. I do not know who they were."[2]

Trivia

  • In an episode of Everybody Hates Chris, Rochelle takes a "grown up" book away from a girl at a book fair. She then takes a copy of Flowers In The Attic ("well that sounds nice") and gives it to her.
  • In an episode of Family Guy, gay Peter reads Flowers in the Attic.

References

  1. ^ Doyle, Robert (1998). Banned Books Resource Guide. The American Library Association. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  2. ^ "Biography: Based on a True Story". Retrieved 2010-01-09.