Petals on the Wind
By (Author) Virginia Andrews
HarperCollins Publishers
HarperCollins
22nd November 2011
1st September 2011
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
813.54
Paperback
416
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 32mm
330g
The bestselling phenomenon of the Dollanganger family saga continues as the children who escaped the attic build new lives, haunted by their tragic past.
Their captivity in their grandparents attic is finally over.
But revenge is a torment they cannot escape
The Dollanganger children are trying to rebuild their lives after suffocating for so long in the terrifying darkness of the attic. The siblings must put aside their past and learn to love and dream again, in order to find their rightful place in the world.
Still, dreams of happiness and success are easily crowded out by thoughts of vengeance. Cathy is determined to make those responsible for destroying their childhood pay, from the grandmother who tormented them to the mother who abandoned them.
Disturbing, lavishly written gothic romance at its finest, Petals on the Wind is the second book in the best-selling Dollanganger saga, still as engrossing today as it was when it first appeared.
An artfully twisted modern fairytale
The Times Magazine
Beautifully written, macabre and thoroughly nasty it is evocative of the nasty fairy tales like Little Red Riding Hood and The Babes in the Wood, with a bit of Victorian Gothic thrown in. What does shine through is her ability to see the world through a childs eyes
Daily Express
Makes horror irresistible
Glasgow Sunday Mail
A gruesome saga the storyline is compelling, many millions have no wish to put this down
Ms London
There is strength in her books the bizarre plots matched with the pathos of the entrapped
The Times
Virginia Andrews lived in Norfolk, Virginia, studied art and worked as a fashion illustrator, commercial artist and portrait painter. Flowers in the Attic, based on a true story, was her first novel. It became an immediate bestseller on both sides of the Atlantic when it was first published in 1979. Virginia Andrews died in 1986, leaving a considerable amount of unpublished work.