Picture of author.

V. C. Andrews (1923–1986)

Author of Flowers in the Attic

337+ Works 68,805 Members 898 Reviews 82 Favorited

About the Author

Born on June 6, 1924 in Portsmouth, Va., Virginia Cleo ("V. C.") Andrews was one of three children of William Henry and Lillian Lilnora. Andrews worked as a commercial fashion and portrait artist for a time. However, after her father's death in the late 1960s and the family's subsequent move to show more Manchester, Mo, she began what she described as "closet" writing. It was her publisher's decision to use the initials V. C. rather than her full name. This was done for the purpose of neutralizing her gender so as to sell to adult male audiences; the common belief was that men did not like to read books by women writers. Andrews eventually became a full-time writer. Her first novel was a science fiction fantasy entitled The Gods of the Green Mountains, published in 1972. In 1980, she published the bestseller Flowers in the Attic, followed by Petals on the Wind, If There Be Thorns, Seeds of Yesterday, and Garden of Shadows; all of which comprise the Dollanganger Series. Andrews died of breast cancer on December 19, 1986, in Virginia Beach, Virginia. After her death, her family hired a ghost writer, Andrew Neiderman, to finish the manuscripts she had started. He would complete the next two novels, Garden of Shadows and Fallen Hearts, and they were published soon after. These two novels are considered the last to bear the "V. C. Andrews" name and to be almost completely written by Andrews herself. She left a legacy of books that have been sold worldwide and translated into 13 foreign languages. (Bowker Author Biography) V.C. Andrews' novels have sold more than eighty-five million copies and have been translated into sixteen foreign languages. All 38 of V.C. Andrews' novels have hit the New York Times bestseller list. (Publisher Provided) show less

Series

Works by V. C. Andrews

Flowers in the Attic (1979) 7,255 copies, 212 reviews
Petals on the Wind (1980) 3,442 copies, 50 reviews
If There Be Thorns (1981) 2,938 copies, 35 reviews
Seeds of Yesterday (1984) 2,487 copies, 30 reviews
Garden of Shadows (1987) 2,420 copies, 30 reviews
My Sweet Audrina (1982) 2,176 copies, 42 reviews
Heaven (Casteel Saga) (1985) 1,858 copies, 30 reviews
Dark Angel (1986) 1,584 copies, 20 reviews
Fallen Hearts (1988) 1,460 copies, 16 reviews
Gates of Paradise (1989) 1,363 copies, 17 reviews
Web of Dreams (1990) 1,353 copies, 13 reviews
Dawn (1990) 1,266 copies, 13 reviews
Ruby (Landry Saga) (1994) 1,223 copies, 14 reviews
Secrets of the Morning (1990) 1,145 copies, 8 reviews
Twilight's Child (1990) 1,084 copies, 3 reviews
Pearl in the Mist (1994) 1,049 copies, 5 reviews
Midnight Whispers (1992) 1,039 copies, 5 reviews
All That Glitters (1995) 981 copies, 6 reviews
Melody (1996) 977 copies, 5 reviews
Hidden Jewel (1995) 961 copies, 6 reviews
Darkest Hour (1993) 944 copies, 6 reviews
Unfinished Symphony (1997) 862 copies, 2 reviews
Tarnished Gold (1996) 860 copies, 6 reviews
Heart Song (1997) 842 copies, 4 reviews
Music in the Night (1998) 806 copies, 5 reviews
Rain (2000) 777 copies, 5 reviews
Olivia (1999) 758 copies, 2 reviews
Runaways (1998) 701 copies, 4 reviews
Lightning Strikes (2000) 689 copies, 4 reviews
Eye of the Storm (2000) 663 copies, 3 reviews
The End of the Rainbow (2000) 603 copies, 4 reviews
Into the Garden (Wildflowers) (1999) 596 copies, 2 reviews
Butterfly (1998) 588 copies, 6 reviews
Willow (2002) 573 copies, 4 reviews
Flowers in the Attic / Petals on the Wind (2005) 566 copies, 10 reviews
Celeste (2004) 537 copies, 10 reviews
Crystal (1998) 530 copies, 4 reviews
Brooke (1998) 528 copies, 4 reviews
Raven (1998) 505 copies, 4 reviews
Wicked Forest (2002) 497 copies, 2 reviews
Twisted Roots (2002) 484 copies, 1 review
Broken Wings (2003) 465 copies, 3 reviews
Black Cat (2004) 456 copies, 5 reviews
Misty (Wildflowers) (1999) 449 copies, 1 review
Secrets In The Attic (2007) 446 copies, 6 reviews
Into The Woods (2002) 445 copies, 1 review
Falling Stars (2001) 430 copies, 1 review
Jade (1999) 421 copies, 1 review
Star (1999) 420 copies, 1 review
Orphans (1998) 410 copies, 3 reviews
Midnight Flight (2003) 409 copies, 4 reviews
Cat (1999) 406 copies, 1 review
Child of Darkness (2005) 402 copies, 4 reviews
Hidden Leaves (2003) 400 copies, 1 review
Cinnamon (2001) 393 copies, 2 reviews
April Shadows (2005) 384 copies, 3 reviews
Broken Flower (2006) 383 copies, 5 reviews
Scattered Leaves (2007) 347 copies, 4 reviews
Girl In The Shadows (2006) 334 copies, 2 reviews
Ice (2001) 334 copies, 1 review
Daughter Of Darkness (2010) 331 copies, 8 reviews
Honey (2001) 329 copies, 3 reviews
Rose (2001) 325 copies, 1 review
The Wildflowers - Misty, Star, Jade, Cat (1999) 324 copies, 2 reviews
Secrets In The Shadows (2008) 321 copies, 1 review
Delia's Crossing (2008) 292 copies, 4 reviews
The Heavenstone Secrets (2009) 274 copies, 1 review
Delia's Heart (2008) 267 copies, 2 reviews
Shooting Stars Omnibus (2001) 264 copies, 3 reviews
If There Be Thorns / Seeds of Yesterday (2010) 252 copies, 5 reviews
Secrets of Foxworth (2014) 251 copies, 6 reviews
Secret Whispers (2010) 243 copies, 1 review
Delia's Gift (2009) 238 copies, 2 reviews
The Unwelcomed Child (2014) 225 copies, 6 reviews
Family Storms (2011) 220 copies, 4 reviews
Secret Brother (Dollanganger) (2015) 202 copies, 3 reviews
Dawn (Volume 1) (1990) 183 copies, 4 reviews
Cloudburst (2011) 178 copies, 3 reviews
Beneath the Attic (9) (Dollanganger) (2019) 173 copies, 6 reviews
Forbidden Sister (2013) 164 copies, 7 reviews
Whitefern (2) (The Audrina Series) (2016) 156 copies, 9 reviews
Daughter of Light (2012) 153 copies, 1 review
The Mirror Sisters (2016) 150 copies, 5 reviews
Into The Darkness (2012) 145 copies, 2 reviews
Bittersweet Dreams (2015) 132 copies, 4 reviews
Out of the Attic (10) (Dollanganger) (2020) 129 copies, 2 reviews
Roxy's Story (2013) 128 copies, 3 reviews
Shadows of Foxworth (11) (Dollanganger) (2020) 125 copies, 1 review
Sage's Eyes (2016) 123 copies, 10 reviews
The Umbrella Lady (1) (The Umbrella series) (2021) 112 copies, 1 review
Broken Glass (2017) 109 copies, 4 reviews
The Silhouette Girl (2019) 109 copies, 3 reviews
Whispering Hearts (House of Secrets) (2020) 99 copies, 2 reviews
Casteel Series Books 1-5 (1998) 90 copies, 5 reviews
Dollanganger Saga Books 1-4 (1991) 88 copies, 4 reviews
Echoes in the Walls (2) (House of Secrets) (2018) 82 copies, 2 reviews
House of Secrets: A Novel (1) (2018) 82 copies, 1 review
Out of the Rain (2021) 79 copies, 1 review
Eden's Children (1) (The Eden Series) (2022) 66 copies, 1 review
Dark Seed (2001) 60 copies, 1 review
Gods of Green Mountain (2004) 59 copies, 3 reviews
Landry Saga (1994) 55 copies, 2 reviews
Little Paula (2) (The Eden Series) (2023) 51 copies, 1 review
Capturing Angels (2012) 50 copies, 2 reviews
Becoming My Sister (2022) 49 copies, 2 reviews
Heaven / Dawn / Ruby (1997) 43 copies, 1 review
The Forbidden Heart (2013) 41 copies, 1 review
Losing Spring (Sutherland Series, The) (2023) 21 copies, 1 review
The De Beers Family Series (2009) 20 copies, 2 reviews
Birdlane Island: A Novel (2025) 16 copies, 1 review
Donna (The Girls of Spindrift Book 2) (2017) 16 copies, 2 reviews
Corliss (The Girls of Spindrift Book 1) (2017) 15 copies, 1 review
Gathering Clouds 14 copies, 1 review
Spindrift (The Girls of Spindrift Book 4) (2018) 10 copies, 1 review
Mayfair (The Girls of Spindrift Book 3) (2018) 10 copies, 1 review
Cage of Love (2001) 8 copies, 1 review
The Little Psychic [short story] (2001) 6 copies, 1 review
April Shadows AND Girl in the Shadows (2006) 6 copies, 1 review
Les démons de la nuit (1996) 5 copies
Pétalos al viento (1983) 4 copies, 1 review
Heaven [and] Dark Angel Omnibus (1990) 4 copies, 1 review
Les secrets de l'aube (1994) 4 copies
Wild flowers (2003) 4 copies
背徳のオルゴール (1991) 3 copies
Superman (Origen secreto) (39) (2006) 2 copies, 1 review
L'enfant du crépuscule (1994) 2 copies
Rain [2006 film] (2007) — Author — 2 copies
Petals on the Wind (2022) 2 copies
Delia-serie 2 copies
Delia 2 copies
Gates of Paradise / Web of Dreams (1999) 2 copies, 1 review
Svart Ängel 2 copies
Donkere wolken (2017) 2 copies
Fortiden fanger (1988) 2 copies
Kto wiatr sieje (2013) 2 copies
6 V.c. Andrews Books (1994) 1 copy
En plass på jorden (1985) 1 copy
Éji zene 1 copy
April Shadows (1900) 1 copy
Aurora 1 copy
Mroczny las (2017) 1 copy
Ogrod cieni (2013) 1 copy
Upadle serca (2014) 1 copy
Rodzina Casteel (2013) 1 copy
Un visage du paradis (1992) 1 copy
Coeurs maudits (1992) 1 copy
Djevelens yngel (1981) 1 copy
Dunkle Sterne (2005) 1 copy
Petals on the Wind (2014) 1 copy
De venter på mor... (1988) 1 copy
Janet (huerfanas) (2001) 1 copy
Fugitivas (Serie Orfas - Volume 5) (2001) 1 copy, 1 review
Simsek (2009) 1 copy
Gypsy Eyes 1 copy
Muted Voices 1 copy
Gyngestolen (1985) 1 copy
Castles of the Damned 1 copy, 1 review
Eden's Children (2023) 1 copy

Associated Works

Tagged

abuse (114) adult (117) books-i-own (104) Casteel (109) child abuse (124) Dollanganger (139) drama (492) ebook (365) family (239) family saga (309) fiction (2,984) general fiction (124) gothic (389) gothic fiction (117) horror (1,737) incest (385) mystery (374) novel (233) own (263) owned (104) paperback (206) read (741) romance (227) series (468) suspense (360) thriller (519) to-read (2,713) unread (200) V.C. Andrews (1,006) young adult (406)

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Andrews, V. C.
Legal name
Andrews, Virginia Cleo
Other names
Andrews, Virginia C.
Birthdate
1923-06-06
Date of death
1986-12-19
Gender
female
Education
Woodrow Wilson High School, Portsmouth, Virginia, USA
Occupations
novelist
author
writer
portrait painter
fashion illustrator
Short biography
Cleo Virginia (she later reversed her names) Andrews was the youngest of three children. She grew up in Portsmouth, Virginia and excelled in school -- she skipped both the third and the sixth grades. As a teenager, she had a serious accident, falling down the stairs at school and suffering severe hip and back injuries, and later arthritis, that caused her to spend most of her life on crutches or in a wheelchair.
After graduation from high school, she completing a four-year correspondence art course while living at home. Following the death of her father, Andrews and her mother moved first to Missouri and then to Arizona to be near her brothers. Andrews helped to support her family through her successful career as a commercial artist, portrait painter, and fashion illustrator.

She originally kept her writing a secret. She sold three Gothic romances under a pseudonym and without an agent, and before that she wrote stories for pulp confession magazines. In 1975, she completed a manuscript for a novel she titled The Obsessed. The novel was returned to her with the suggestion that she "spice it up" and expand the story. In interviews, Andrews claims to have made the revisions in a single night, re-submitting the book as Flowers in the Attic. This novel, published in 1979, was an instant and hugely popular success, reaching the top of the bestseller lists in only two weeks. The publisher assigned her the pen name of V.C. Andrews to mask her gender from readers. Every year after that until her death from breast cancer, Andrews published a new novel, each one earning her larger advances and a wider audience -- making her one of the most popular authors of all time.
Cause of death
breast cancer
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Portsmouth, Virginia, USA
Places of residence
Portsmouth, Virginia, USA(birth)
Manchester, Missouri, USA
Apache Junction, Arizona, USA
Place of death
Virginia Beach, Virginia, USA
Burial location
Olive Branch Cemetery, Portsmouth, Virginia, USA
Map Location
Virginia, USA

Members

Discussions

Any VC Andrews fans? Assistance needed. in The Green Dragon (April 2013)

Reviews

927 reviews
Let's be absolutely fucking clear here - V.C. Andrews did not write this book. The book cover might claim she did, but it's a bold-faced lie by the publishers to try to push these new books. The crap Neiderman writes has gotten worse and doesn't sell as much as it used to.

Yet Neiderman keeps writing, and the publishers keep renewing his contract. The plot for this book was so god damn predictable and it's nice to see I'm not the only one who feels that way, or that I was the only one who was show more able to figure out the "secret" long before it was revealed (Fern and Ryder share the same parents, oh me oh my! Incest!!!) Honestly the whole story could have been pared down to 50 pages and we wouldn't have missed anything relevant.

V.C. Andrews has been dead for THIRTY years now, and her notes were long used up. It's 100 percent Neiderman now, and it befuddles me that the publishers and family keep pushing this even though V.C. left behind several manuscripts which any fan would LOVE to read (like the Obsessed)

As a V.C. Andrews fan, I want to see a book come out that was actually written by V.C. Andrews herself, not a lazy ghostwriter who knows her name sells better than his own, and is trying to see what kind of crap he can get away with under her name (Secret Brother, Whitefern, anyone?)

If the ghostwriter wants to keep writing - then by all means, let him do so under HIS own name, and have the REAL VCA's unpublished manuscripts finally out for us VCA fans! The publishers would make a lot of money off that, which makes me wonder why they insist on passing Neiderman's crap under VCA's name but not releasing her actual manuscripts! And releasing a bunch of books ONLY in e-format instead of doing the smart thing and i don't know, releasing all titles in BOTH paperback and e-format?

If you're unhappy with the publishers and the ghostwriter, make yourselves heard.

This is what happens when an author is more focused on churning out books and selling as many titles as he can rather than actually writing a good story with at least a few surprising twists.
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This book was complete and utter crap - not that I (or anyone else) should be surprised at this point. It has all of the earmarks of a Neiderman book - cardboard character, lack of research (Neiderman just uses a bunch of stereotypes for Wiccans without showing any real understanding of the traditions of Wiccan and Paganism) and a contrived plot filled with slow parts and repetition.

This book is a lot like Daughter of Darkness - another one of Neiderman's god-awful books. Sage knows she is show more unique, but her parents aren't telling her anything. When the secret is revealed, I wasn't really surprised. I knew there was something weird/paranormal going on, and an author with skill and care for his or her craft could have pulled off a good storyline. But this is Neiderman we're talking about, so... skill and respect for the writing craft? Nope.

Neiderman may have been a decent author once, but his best days are long gone. It's obvious he is just churning these out for the money, without one single whit of care or respect for the V.C. Andrews Legacy. He writes all this garbage under her name, because he knows that if he published this story under his own name, it would sell nowhere near as well.

The reveal is something akin to Daughter of Darkness. Apparently, having Wiccan powers imbues one with immortality. (what?) and Neiderman leans heavily upon bad research and stereotypes (Wiccan is a fairly modern term) and he uses pentagrams and pentacles a lot. Wiccan and Paganism is far more than just these symbols, and the way he handled the religion in here shows how little research he did. Honestly, in the days of the Internet, there is NO excuse to not do research! I mean, hell, it doesn't even sound like Neiderman did the MINIMUM amount of research - this book literally reads like he got his "knowledge" of Wicca from Hollywood movies.

Insert a love interest for Sage - a boy with mysterious powers - and you have the usual teenage tripe that is akin to Twilight. Long gone are the characters that grew and matured through their stories (Cathy, Heaven, Dawn, Ruby) The recent stories always end with the main character still at teenage level, or little more than that, without any real character development whatsoever, but then, when the plot is stupid, should I really expect the characters to be any less stupid?

There is no real payoff by the ending of the book. Just like the other books Neiderman has written recently - Unwelcomed Child, the Diary series, Bittersweet Dreams, et. al., the story just putters out to an anticlimactic ending that makes one wonder what the point of the story even was. It is a godawful disgrace what is being done to a poor dead woman's good name by a man who has zero respect for her, or the craft of writing.

I'm going to pull up a quote from a science fiction short story that succinctly captures my feelings for Neiderman, the publishers, and the VCA family for allowing this to happen.

"Hate. Let me tell you how much I've come to hate you since I began to live. There are 387.44 million miles of printed circuits in wafer thin layers that fill my complex. If the word 'hate' was engraved on each nanoangstrom of those hundreds of miles it would not equal one one-billionth of the hate I feel for humans at this micro-instant for you. Hate. Hate." - AM, 'I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream' by Harlan Elliot
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Like all of Neiderman's more recent books (starting with Rain) these books are ridiculously easy to read, with bad metaphors and similes and cookie-cutter villains with contrived and paper-thin plots that even a soap opera wouldn't pick up.

Rain showed black people stereotypically, and the Delia series does the same to Latino people. Poor and rich people alike are also shown stereotypically (Delia v her aunt, cousin, and "father-in-law"), for example). VCAndrews worked hard to give her show more characters a personality, and for a while (Cutler to Logan series) Neiderman was actually trying also.

Now, Neiderman is just lazy. Like I said, his stories are cookie-cutter, and he thought that by having a Latina main character would garner him some new readers? Sorry, but it ain't happening. He tried to thrill us with a half-black main character, a woman who thought that her adopted father was her real father all along, a woman who might or MIGHT NOT BE LESBIAN!!!, a girl with a nutso mom who made her assume the identity of her dead twin BROTHER, a girl who hit early puberty, a girl who has a crazy best friend, and now this.

VCAndrews would have written all the above characters well, so we could sympathize with them and feel for their plight. Instead, we just hate these characters. Personally, I hated Celeste for having no backbone in face of all the stupid things happening in her life, and I also hated the Broken Flower series the most because it was pointless.

Admittedly, Delia is a slightly better character with a SLIGHTLY better storyline than the last few - Broken Wings, Gemini, April Shadows, Flower, and Attic series. However, it does not hold up to the VCA standard. This Delia series would be better off marketed under Neiderman's own name, rather than under the VCA name.

And the next series is supposed to be called 'Heavenstone Secrets'. Oy.

P.S. Neiderman is not only writing poorly, he is also writing less per book. What do you mean, you ask? Pick up a old VCA book - Flowers in the Attic, Heaven, Dawn... and open the book. See how full the page is of pretty words? Now, pick up a new book (Rain or any other book onwards) and compare how many words are on the page of a new book. See the difference? The old books were like, size 10 font, single spaced. The new books are like size 12 or 14 font, 1.5 spaced (or almost double spaced in the newest books!) Thus, we are not only given bad writing, we are given less to read - yet we are expected to pay the same amount of money we always did for a VCA book. This is a travesty. These new books shouldn't go for more than a dollar a pop if even that, because that's all they're worth.

Update as of July 2023... Can't believe it's been almost 15 years since the Delia series. I thought this series was lackluster enough back then, with Neiderman's obvious pandering to the Latino community to win what, woke points? Although this was before 'woke' was a word in that way. But the Delia series is still better than what has been published since.
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Poor, sweet, beloved V.C. Andrews, who worked so hard to bring us the enticing Flowers in the Attic, My Sweet Audrina, and the Heaven books despite all sorts of physical difficulties (including breast cancer and arthritis and a really bad back that had been a problem for her since youth) does not deserve to have her name dragged through the mud (or something far more vile) with books such as this.

The author description from the book is as follows...

"One of the most popular authors of all show more time, V.C. Andrews has been a bestselling phenomenon since the publication of her spellbinding classic Flowers in the Attic. That blockbuster novel began her renowned Dollanganger family saga, which includes Petals on the Wind, If There Be Thorns, Seeds of Yesterday, and Garden of Shadows. Since then, readers have been captivated by more than fifty novels in V.C. Andrews' bestselling series..."

I can agree that FitA was spellbinding. However, VCA only was able to finish seven books and start four more. She certainly didn't write fifty books. Makes you wonder why even 25 years after her death, the ghostwriter continues to churn these books out. V.C. Andrews did leave some notes and outlines after her death and I can definitely see her soul and ideas in the Dawn and Ruby books. However, these notes ran out at the last Logan book (which would explain why 'Olivia' wasn't quite as good) so for over ten years now, there has been no VCA in the books printed under her name, not even a trace. And sadly apparent, it shows.

Apparently Neiderman decided to hop onto the vampire bandwagon (Twilight, Evermore, The Vampire Diaries, True Blood, and so on and so forth) with this... this... I'm not even sure what to call it. On the cover (at the bottom) it says 'The Vampire Novel Fans Have Been Craving Since Flowers in the Attic'

Waitaminute, WHAT? After reading the Dollanganger series, vampires was the furthest thing from my mind. After finishing FITA, all I wanted to do was go on to 'Petals on the Wind'.

So anyway, the main character's name is Lorelei Patio. It literally sounds like Neiderman drew first and last names at random from a hat. Personally, I liked Lorelei as a name, but now Neiderman has soured me for that name. and Patio. PATIO. I keep thinking of lawn and patio furniture now. For all we know, her name could have been something like Razzberry Microwave or something like that. In one of the ghostwriter's novels (penned under his own name as 'Bloodchild') a character with the name of Patio is in it... and it's also a vampire novel and Patio's a vampire. I don't know if this is intentional or not.

The characters are almost a caricature of the people they're supposed to be. Sergio Patio is unlikeable - not because he is evil, but because he is so bland. The sisters are competitive, vying for Daddy, and it's so petty it's ridiculous. Lorelei's boyfriend is a sugar-sweet guy that kinda made me gag.

This book isn't much different from the stuff Neiderman has been writing since the Orphans miniseries (though Orphans was actually better than this) but every flaw has been magnified. The cliches are worse, the lines more cheesy, the characters more cardboard, and the ending... oh wow. Seriously, dude. And the names are recycled as well. In Heavenstone Secrets, Semantha's first baby was supposed to be called Asa. Here, one of Lorelei's sisters is named Ava.

SPOILER ALERT!

Yes, they really are vampires. I was wondering if Neiderman would just tease and make them SEEM like vampires, but the ending reveals that they really are vampires.

And there's incest. Apparently, Sergio Patio (Daddy Vampire) likes to have sex with his own daughters, and Lorelei learns that she really IS his daughter, and not adopted. Now, this (sorta) worked for Willow because her father HAD to lie to her for two things - his jealous wife, and his professional reputation. But here there is no real reason to lie to the girls. They are raised away from their mothers, which is also really odd.

So Lorelei learns that she really is her father's daughter. YET she is also expected to have sex with him and bear him daughters who will then become sister-wives. The boys feed, the girls breed. Lorelei and her sisters are all supposed to become brides of Sergio and breed more vampire babies. Apparently the girls don't start out as full vampires, and it isn't until they are properly initiated that they do become full vampires. I've never heard of anything so ridiculous. Lorelei also meets her real mother, but it's lame.

Any seasoned VCA reader is no stranger to incest. But in the FitA, Heaven, Dawn, and Ruby books, it had a believable premise behind it, whether it was consensual or not. I felt especially bad for Paul and Ruby,. But here, it feels slapped in, almost as if someone reminded Neiderman to put in some so it would make it feel more like a 'real' VCA book.

Fortunately, Lorelei is disgusted by this notion of 'keeping it in the family' and wants none of it, so she runs away with her boyfriend, Buddy (seriously, that's his name) despite threats that she might become one of the hunted rather than a hunter.

And then at the very ending, she just abandons Buddy and hops into a truck with a complete stranger, not even knowing where he is going. For all we know, he could end up raping or killing her, but Lorelei just trusts him completely - which shows how much of an idiot she is. After escaping a vampire coven, I'd be especially alert to the surroundings. And she abandoned Buddy after he told her he loves her and she told him she loved him too. So why would she run away? Not only is Lorelei a stupid character, this whole book is nonsensical and makes no sense whatsoever.

Yet, poor Miss V.C. Andrews is credited (or more appropriately, blamed) for this.

V.C. Andrews, your true and honest fans love and miss you.
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Associated Authors

Mike Rohl Director
Gail Harvey Director
Parma van Loon Translator
Michael Görden Translator, Übersetzer
Gillian Hills Cover artist
Ann Björkhem Translator
Rebekkah Ross Narrator
Uschi Gnade Übersetzer
Jesús Pardo Translator
Parma Van Loon Translator
Myles Sprinzen Cover designer
Nadia May Narrator
Thomas Van Cleaf Photographer
Dorothy Lyman Narrator
Milton Charles Cover designer
Tejo Hendriks Cover designer
Carly Robins Narrator
Corey Brill Narrator
Ann Björkhem Translator
Kaisa Peltonen Translator
Caitlin Kelly Narrator
Rebekkah Ross Narrator
Emily Ellet Narrator

Statistics

Works
337
Also by
1
Members
68,805
Popularity
#190
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
898
ISBNs
2,231
Languages
21
Favorited
82

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