Reviews

The Room in the Attic by Louise Douglas

hanners87's review against another edition

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4.0

Started out with some nice supernatural suspense but then ended too abruptly.

emkayreads's review against another edition

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5.0

I was so engrossed!

With Characters that are so real and a story that keeps you guessing, this has been another expertly crafted story.

marilynw's review

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4.0

The Room in the Attic by Louise Douglas
Narrated by Helen Barford and David Thorpe

All Hallows has a long and unpleasant past. For years it was an asylum and at first all the patients were treated the same, with dignity. Later came different management and there were rooms set aside for the wealthy, complete with flowers, fine food and drink, and personal attention from the staff. By this time the rest of the patients were treated by being drugged into a stupor, bound, chained, and stripped of their clothes and all their dignity, until there was little left of them, body or mind. This was the way things were in 1903 when an unconscious woman and her young daughter were brought to the asylum in very bad shape.

All Hallows is a boarding school in 1993. It's worse for wear and there has been some flooding so when thirteen year old Lewis is sent there, it's darker and danker than ever. At least Lewis becomes friends and roommates with surly Isak. While repairs are made on the bigger group room where the boys will eventually sleep, the two of them have a room of their own, under an old attic that has the strangest noises coming from it.

I really like Lewis. He can hardly keep his mind on anything related to school or adults. It's always going off on tangents that are interesting to him and to me. Both he and Isak are smart and creative even if their grades don't reflect it. Once they realize something strange is going on in the school they spend most of their spare time in the library or their room reading about the past of All Hallows and it's staff and residents.

The story alternates between a female narrator for the 1903 timeline and a male narrator for 1993 and most of the chapters are very short. I really like how the story was done because I never had a chance to lose the thread of either timeline. In the earlier timeline we spend time with the little girl, Harriet, and Nurse Emma, who is to take care of her while her mother recovers from her injuries. Old Emma thought her heart had hardened after her little boy died fifty years ago but she was wrong. Harriet breaks through that barrier and Emma would do anything to keep Harriet safe.

The two timelines are going to meet although it takes two creative and curious boys to allow it to happen. I like how the story is told and how the story is resolved. I definitely want to read more by this author.

Published 2021 by Boldwood Books

shirin_mandi's review against another edition

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5.0

"if you love someone, they never really leave you.
Nothing that existed could ever be gone. She must be somewhere and I thought that if I looked hard enough, I would find her…"

I was reading this book with two other books and this was supposed to finish after others. I was supposed to reading it a little before sleep or on the subway. But not only did I finish it first also I found myself listening to it stared on my laptop but wouldn't do my work! I know I know this isn't related to the book so get to the story.

An aged nurse, Emma in the asylum, All Hallow in 1903, and a man, Lewis in 2020 who remembered when he was young in a boarding school, same old asylum in 1993.

"It was because of Isak and me, and everything that happened in those last months of 1993 when I was thirteen and Isak was fourteen and we shared the same bedroom at All Hallows. The time that began at the very point when my whole world had fallen apart."

This was a historical fiction story about two friends who are curious about the history of All Hallow but, this is not all, a mysterious child, skull, bones, ghost, murder, place for torture, and a nurse who was buried on the wrong side of the graveyard.

This was a heartbreaking and suspenseful story. I enjoyed the relationship between mother and son and two friends. The characters are touchable and pleasant. I loved it.

"Pain can be alleviated. Human beings are an optimistic bunch, but it’s disingenuous to think there will always be a happy ending."

Many thanks to Boldwood Books and NetGalley for giving me a chance to read The Room in the Attic by Louise Douglas, I have given my honest review.

kazza27's review against another edition

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5.0

Thank you to Rachel at Random Resources tours for my invitation to the tour and for my copy of the e book in return for a fair and honest review.

Lewis works for an architect and he is asked to visit All Hallows on Dartmoor for a client. What he does not let on is that he has a history with All Hallows. He was sent there to school by his father and step mother after his mother dies. We know from the outset that it was not a happy place for him and something traumatic happened there.

We go back to 1993 when Lewis is sent to All Hallows and there he meets Isak.

The second timeline of the story is about a young woman who is found with her child in the sea and is also taken to All Hallows but this time it is in 1903 when it is an asylum. The child is called Harriet and Nurse Everdeen is sent to look after her and her mother. No one knows what happened to Harriet and her mother, but she is badly injured.

The two stories run concurrently and it was easy to follow and switch between All Hallows in 1903 and 90 years later.

All Hallows gave me the chills, and poor Lewis he has had such a tough time and going to the awful school is the final straw for him. Brutal and unrelenting the school believes it will break any boy who does not adhere to the rules. Lewis makes a shocking discovery which leads him to investigate who Emma Everdeen was and why she was at All Hallows. Isak and him become engrossed with her story.

This is a really compelling read, it is dark and atmospheric. I could imagine the bleak and gothic setting on Dartmoor which is full of legends of ghosts and folklore. It particularly resonated with me as I have lived with Dartmoor in sight my whole life and my maternal grandmother was born in Scarborough so also have connections to North Yorkshire. It is a story full of mystery and suspense and it’s a great winter read for long dark nights!

5 stars ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

atune24's review

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emotional mysterious sad tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.0

_marian_'s review against another edition

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4.0

4'5⭐

"Only the rocking chair moved, rocking forwards and backwards as if whoever had been sitting in it had, a moment earlier, got up and left the room."

Lovable, endearing characters with harsh, sad lives who, in spite of everthing they have endured, are capable of the most selfless acts. Emma, Lewis, Maria, Harriet, Isak, Sam, Thalia... Only thing is, I was expecting more spookyness but loved it the way it is -descriptions of places, people, feelings...

Loved Emma, cried for and with her. Such a lovely old lady. I was touched by Maria's pseudo-plot-twist at the end (I was slightly distressed by her 'previous' behaviour).

Lewis is just a sweetheart full of imagination and curiosity. Together Lewis and Isak have more common sense than all their teachers.

gemma_tunstall's review against another edition

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dark mysterious tense fast-paced

3.5

megs_booknook's review

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adventurous dark mysterious sad tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

5.0

bcgg's review against another edition

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3.0

I can see this one being made into a movie, perhaps geared for teens YA. It would make a good yarn by a campfire except for its length. I think I am trying to say it was entertaining but not a great novel. I would recommend it but not rave about it as a 'must read'.