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Flowers in the Attic
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Flowers in the Attic
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Angie, Constant Reader
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Dec 31, 2019 11:27AM

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Some of these girls also read Flowers in the Attic, which I did not read and had no idea what it was about until a few years. So not an innocent read for kids, haha.
Either way, I am curious, so I'll get a copy (hopefully I don't get any funny looks), and I'll join you peeps in reading this! :D

Some of these girls also read Flowers in the Attic, which I..."
LOL! Oscar, I don't think you will get any funny looks...you will just be getting a copy for your niece, right? :)

Some of these girls also read Flowers in the Attic, which I..."
Too funny, Oscar! When I was a teen, I read Little Women, Little Men, and all of the V.C. Andrews I could get my hands on... I was fascinated, hooked by Flowers in the Attic, which I read on my living room with Dio's "The Last in Line" cranking through my Sony Walkman headphones... don't know why this stands out for me, but it does. And no one gave me any funny looks except my mother. LOL!!


I read these books when I was around 10 years old so when I saw them with the original covers I felt nostalgic and decided to get them. I also got My Sweet Audrina.
These books were probably not very suitable for a 10 year old but they were very popular back in the 80’s so I went through a VC Andrews phase.
I guess I may as well read it now since there’s a group read happening! I’ll start once I finish the book I’m currently reading.

Can't say I've ever had such a fun guilty pleasure as when I read all her early series. Plan to start the trip down memory lane this weekend, if life allows it.


I remember Heaven was the one about the Hillbilly girl named “Heaven”. The one you are thinking of is My Sweet Audrina which was one of the few standalone VC Andrews books not part of a series.
Hi Marlise,
I’m interested to see how these stories hold up after all these years! It’s always interesting to revisit books that I read when I was very young. I notice as I’m revisiting Stephen King’s work that when I find a copy with the original cover it really brings up a lot of other memories for me that have nothing to do with the book. I think there’s also been a remake of the movie adaptation of Flowers In The Attic so I may check that out too.


And darn it, haha, I now want to read the next book!

And darn it, haha, I now want to read the next book!"
They are strangely addictive. My friends and I call this kind of book "book crack." You know it isn't good for you, or even written all that well, but then again it must be because you can't stop! Things like this, Twilight, the Fifty Shades books, all fall into the Book Crack category.

I have a little more to go on Skeleton Crew and I'll start this one. Probably this weekend. Sounds really intriguing.

Summer wrote: "So, question. Do y'all think [spoilers removed]?"
I think she knew about the attraction but was disgusted at first and ignored it. I felt like throughout the series she was never truly attracted to her brother but was pushed into it by the other characters around her.
I think Chris's attraction could have been prevented if he were allowed to have a normal childhood.
I think she knew about the attraction but was disgusted at first and ignored it. I felt like throughout the series she was never truly attracted to her brother but was pushed into it by the other characters around her.
I think Chris's attraction could have been prevented if he were allowed to have a normal childhood.


V.C. Andrews books get a lot of criticism, but they were very popular when I was a pre-teen. Looking back, I'm not sure if they were appropriate for that age group, but that's what we were all reading back then.
The critics can go on and on about the bad writing, but I have to say V.C. Andrews knew how to tell a good story. Even after all these years, I was easily drawn into the book and wanted to keep reading. It may not be considered literature, but who cares? It's still a good story and it was nice to revisit it after all these years.
Unfortunately, the movie adaptations were not very good. I just watched the 2014 remake and although Ellen Burstyn was great as the Grandmother, overall the movie was weak.

V.C. Andrews books get a lot of criticism, but they were very popular when I was a pre-teen. Looking back..."
I'm listening to Mena Suvari read the audio book and she does a great job. A good reading can sometimes cover up bad writing, but the writing seems first rate to me. There may be a few overly dramatic outbursts by the twins, and melodramatic nastiness by the grandma but so far so good. I think the mother is a very interesting very flawed character. As far as being inappropriate for the pre-teen age group... haven't gotten there yet.


Great point, and I think you're right. I watched both the movies after finishing up the book and they were quite different. The first movie filmed but didn't include the entire incest plotline and the second one handled the relationship in more of a romantic than forced way. I'm not quite sure what I think of all that, but it's interesting to see the different things people chose to highlight.

V.C. Andrews books get a lot of criticism, but they were very popular when I was a pre-teen. Looking back..."
this is my first time reading any of these. i love them! i was pulled in right away and haven't lost interest. i don't think i've seen any of the movies from start to finish.
i'm around 60%, Mama just showed back up after being gone for months. i think she was on her honeymoon.


I'm way behind but I could have told you that half way through... or earlier.

I think that the stress of what the children were enduring was what pushed the two eldest over the edge (view spoiler) .
I really encourage anyone who is reading this for the first time and loves it, to continue the series. If anyone is up for it maybe we could do a buddy read of Book 2 Petals on the Wind next month?

I'm so curious about her mother and the timeline of the decisions she made. (view spoiler)
I would love to read the buddy read discussion for Petals on the Wind, because from what Wikipedia says it sounds BONKERS.

The paperbacks I recently picked up 2nd hand have the original cover art, but I seem to remember my original copies back in the day would open to reveal a larger creepy painting expanding on the snapshot that shows on the front cover. For example Flowers in the Attic showed Cathy in a cutout of the window and opened to show Christoper and the twins with her in the Attic. Does anyone remember this?



Good news for me, I had a loving sister who made me sort of her heroic big brother figure, and that was a wonderful feeling. So, I could identify with Chris a little bit. We still feel that way about each other, BTW, even though we're now thousands of miles apart and only see each other every few years.
Anyway, special kudos for Mena Suvari who did a fabulous job reading the audiobook. As for reading Petals in the Wind... I'll have to see how long it takes me to recover from this experience before I can commit.

Here's an interesting post I found with a letter from V.C. Andrews implying this story wasn't completely fictional...
http://www.completevca.com/bio_truest...
Books mentioned in this topic
Petals on the Wind (other topics)Heaven (other topics)