I just finished 'The Broken Girls' and the way it weaves history with mystery is absolutely gripping. The novel alternates between two timelines—1950s Vermont and the present day—creating this eerie parallel between past and present crimes at the Idlewild Hall boarding school. The historical thread dives deep into the oppressive atmosphere of the 1950s, showing how society treated 'difficult' girls by shoving them into this grim institution. It’s not just backdrop; the historical details fuel the mystery, like how the girls’ disappearances were brushed aside because no one cared about 'troublesome' orphans. The present-day storyline follows journalist Fiona Sheridan, who stumbles onto a decades-old murder connected to the school. The genius lies in how the past isn’t just solved—it actively haunts the present, with ghostly elements blurring the lines between historical injustice and supernatural revenge. The cold case isn’t a dusty artifact; it’s alive, demanding resolution. The book treats history like a crime scene, where every detail—racism, classism, the treatment of women—becomes a clue to unravel the central mystery.
The blending isn’t just structural; it’s thematic. The historical sections aren’t there for flavor—they expose systemic flaws that explain why the mystery persisted unsolved. The ghosts aren’t cheap scares; they’re manifestations of unresolved trauma, tying the past’s brutality to the present’s quest for truth. The mystery genre’s usual 'whodunit' gets depth from the historical lens, making you question not just who killed the girls, but why the system let it happen. The pacing is masterful too—every reveal in the past timeline ratchets up the tension in the present, making it impossible to put down.
What makes 'The Broken Girls' stand out is how it uses history to elevate the mystery. The 1950s timeline isn’t just a setting; it’s a character. The boarding school’s grim reality—where 'unwanted' girls are dumped—creates this simmering dread that fuels the modern-day investigation. Fiona’s discovery of a body on the school grounds isn’t just a plot device; it’s a reckoning with history’s indifference. The ghost stories aren’t tacked-on tropes; they’re echoes of real suffering, making the past feel urgent. The book’s brilliance is in showing how some mysteries stay buried not because they’re unsolvable, but because no one bothered to dig.
2025-07-07 12:12:49
26
Lihat Semua Jawaban
Pindai kode untuk mengunduh Aplikasi
Buku Terkait
Fractured
N.O Darling
10
475.3K
Warning: Mature Content Ahead.
Can’t decide what trope you want to read next? Well, look no further because Fractured has it all.
If you're ready to dive into a world where passion meets peril, where dominance intertwines with desire, and where one fierce female leads the charge, then this book is for you.
On her first day at university, Josie’s life takes a dramatic turn. Expecting nothing more than the typical college experience, she instead finds herself thrust into a realm of supernatural intrigue. Her guide into this new world is none other than her enigmatic and irresistibly attractive headmaster.
As Josie navigates her new reality, she encounters five breathtakingly hot males, each with their own secrets and powers. These men are not just eye candy; they play pivotal roles in a dangerous game of power and attraction.
Josie must learn to harness her strength, confront hidden enemies, and balance the intense chemistry with the dominant males who surround her. Her journey is one of self-discovery, resilience, and undeniable passion.
This book is a thrilling blend of romance, suspense, and supernatural elements, perfect for readers who crave a story that's as hot as it is heart-pounding. Prepare for mature themes and explicit scenes that will leave you breathless.
Join Josie as she embarks on an adventure that will challenge her, change her, and ignite a flame within her that burns brighter than she ever imagined. This story contains explicit group scenes including some bxb.
Cara Nelson is the daughter of two Guardians. Her mother gave her life saving the pack’s Luna and their young son, Rik, the future alpha. Her father became paralyzed while protecting the pack’s Alpha. Cara is meant to become the Guardian for Rik when he takes over as Alpha, but Rik doesn’t even know who she is.
When the Alpha of a neighboring pack expresses his desire to take her as his mate, Cara gets caught in a battle between Alphas. Both of them want her as their Luna, but is it only because she is a Guardian who can strengthen their pack?
While balancing her attraction to two alphas, she finds her destiny may not be as clear as she thought. Rather than her wolf having the soul of a reborn guardian like her mother and father, Cara learns that she and her wolf are the only ones in history known to have been born a guardian.
When a third contender for Cara’s hand tries to force her to become his Luna, her Alphas must rescue her before it's too late. Cara is destined to be a Luna, but will it be by force, by fate, or will she make her own choice?
This is Book One of the Guardian trilogy.
Promise was born into silence — a silence woven from an oath made before she could speak. Her village called it tradition. Her mother called it survival. But to Promise, it was a prison.
She dreamed of Lagos, of lights and cameras, of a life that stretched beyond clay walls and whispered fears. Yet when the truth of her birth is revealed, everything she longs for seems impossibly far. The elders insist she must never leave. Her mother pleads with her to stay. And the weight of generations threatens to bury her voice.
Between love and loyalty, fear and freedom, Promise must choose whether to surrender to a curse or defy it — even if it means breaking her world apart.
The Girl Who Broke the Silence is a sweeping tale of tradition and defiance, of love and survival. It is the story of one girl’s fight to claim her name in a world that tried to silence her.
Nicole Evans never asked to be followed. She never asked for eyes in the dark, for a man like Vane to orbit her life with silence and devotion sharp enough to wound. But obsession doesn’t ask permission. It waits. It watches. It becomes inevitable.
What began with missing men and shadows on rooftops soon unraveled into something far more intimate—an assassin who couldn’t let go, and a woman who, piece by piece, stopped trying to make him. As friends vanished and her world narrowed, Nicole found herself drawn toward the very thing she feared most—not out of love, but recognition. In his violence, there was something terrifyingly tender. In his silence, something that listened more closely than anyone else ever had.
Theirs is not a love story in any ordinary sense.
It’s a descent—a long, slow collapse into dependency, into surrender. A story told in bruises and shared tea, in blood and in stillness. A quiet unraveling that doesn’t end in escape, but in a house by the sea, where memory lingers and echoes never fade.
Some stories don’t ask to be understood. Only remembered.
For a thousand years, the two most powerful families in the world of witchcraft have been at war. In a bid to end the violence once and for all, they arrange a union between their children, Tessa and Rafik.
At a dinner party meant to finalize the marriage negotiations, the ancient feud comes to a bloody end.
Young Tessa Mason barely escapes Savannah with her life and is forced into hiding with her twin brother and immortal Viking guardian for ten years until all her enemies are eliminated.
At her 23rd birthday celebration, she receives an invitation to study with the best potion maker in the world. When she arrives in England ready to get on with her life, she is confronted by the man who deceived her all those years ago.
Sparks fly between these star crossed lovers as Rafik tries his best to make amends to Tessa. Unfortunately, she isn't the only one who wants him to pay for the sins of his past.
The most miserable part about betrayal is that it never comes from your enemies, but they’re all about to discover what a wicked witch Tessa can be.
Queen of Ruin is the first book in the Queen of Ruin Series. In this Dark Paranormal Romance and Fantasy series of stories, you’ll meet a cast of broken, but loveable creatures trying their best to save the world.
Get Queen of Ruin today and run away with Tessa on her fiery journey through the depths of darkness.
They said marriage was for the two person who wanted to be together.
They take their vows and promised to be together until their last breath.
Demir the man who has everything in his life and could get anything he wanted in just a snap tied the knot with a woman he never loved neither showed sympathy, namely Selin. The woman who could give everything for Demir just to see him happy.
As the CEO of Krumpus Shipping Company, Demir has a lot of responsibility on his shoulders as the company was on the top in shipping around the globe, but the company once he looked up to was now in a dragging point.
Demir has no choice.
Selin chooses him over anything else.
She loved him and she would do everything for him even though it might cost herself.
I've read 'The Broken Girls' multiple times, and while it feels chillingly real, it's not based on a true story. Simone St. James crafted a fictional narrative inspired by real-life elements—abandoned boarding schools, cold cases, and urban legends. The setting mirrors actual 'asylums for troubled girls' that existed in the mid-20th century, places where society hid away women who didn't conform. The ghost story woven into the plot taps into universal fears, but the specific events and characters are products of St. James' imagination. If you want something based on true crime, try 'The Stranger Beside Me' by Ann Rule—it's about Ted Bundy.
I just finished 'The Broken Girls' last week, and the timeline really stuck with me. The main story unfolds in 2014, following journalist Fiona Sheridan as she investigates a murder tied to Idlewild Hall, a creepy abandoned boarding school. What makes this book special is how it jumps back to 1950, showing the school when it was still operating. The 1950s sections follow four roommates dealing with dark secrets at the school. The contrast between these two eras creates this awesome tension—modern investigative tools versus old-school mysteries that got buried with time. The 1950s setting feels particularly vivid, with its strict social rules and the way the girls navigate them.