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Behind the Attic Wall by Sylvia Cassedy
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Behind the Attic Wall (original 1983; edition 1985)

by Sylvia Cassedy

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1,0082420,571 (3.94)23
In the bleak, forbidding house of her great-aunts, neglected twelve-year-old orphan Maggie hears ghostly voices and finds magic that awakens in her the capacity to love and be loved.
Member:June6Bug
Title:Behind the Attic Wall
Authors:Sylvia Cassedy
Info:HarperTrophy (1985), Edition: 1ST, Paperback, 320 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:****
Tags:children, fiction, novel, KEEP

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Behind the Attic Wall by Sylvia Cassedy (1983)

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» See also 23 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 24 (next | show all)
Read this one a while back...maybe even when Callie was little. Old dolls...attics...what's not to love? ( )
  Kim.Sasso | Aug 27, 2023 |
Looks like most Library Thing reviewers liked this book, as did most critics. It won several notable awards and citations. But it all fell flat for me.
Behind the Attic Wall introduces an unlikable orphaned girl who is sent to live with two equally unlikable aunts. She has a highly entertaining and eccentric uncle who shows up occasionally, like a breath of fresh air, as he is the only character in the book who is actually likable.
Once in the monstrous home of the aunts, which is a former boarding school, Maggie begins to hear voices, eventually finding her way to an attic room where she engages in conversations with two antique dolls who have been forgotten up there. For most of the book, is somewhat ambiguous whether the dolls are actually alive, or if we are merely witnessing the active imagination of a lonely child. (This is clarified on the last few pages.) But I found the repetitive scenes with Maggie's imaginary friends "the Blackwood girls" boring and irritating. This obnoxious child is even rude to her imaginary friends! Maggie doesn't seem to learn anything through the course of the book. She's as loathsome at the end as she was at the beginning. Some will argue with me that going through the childhood Maggie went through, no wonder she behaves as she does. And that is a fair argument. But it doesn't make spending time with a child like that a pleasant experience. ( )
  fingerpost | May 12, 2021 |
Read as a kid and recall only confused feelings about it. Decades later: Yeah. It's the kind of claustrophobic slooow plot with anticlimactic pseudo-resolution that I didn't feel comfortable with then and don't enjoy much more now. Much of it feels, like the uncle's humour, like it's trying too hard.

(It was really hard to figure out his deal. At first I figured totally unfamiliar with kids and trying too hard to be quirky. Then somewhat browbeaten by, somewhat rebellious of, the great-aunts. Charitably I could see him not realising how desperately she needed kindness. Then... idk, under some kind of geas to never mention the dolls? Maybe talking about them is as dangerous as letting the wrong people in to see them? It's the only possible explanation!)

What's most creepy to me now is how badly Maggie's clearly been treated, to be acting out as she does, and turning all the scolding she receives onto the Backwoods Girls, and how desperate she is for the uncle to say something simply nice to her. That she can have a healthy relationship with her two adoptive sisters in the book's future can only be attributed to her having experienced those morsels of friendship from the dolls.

So much is ambiguous that it's really hard to tell if there's a lot below the surface, or just a lot that the author didn't care about while contriving the situation/outcome she wanted. ( )
  zeborah | Jul 18, 2019 |
This is a melancholy little ghost story that never pulls its punches.

I'd gotten this as a gift around the time it originally came out. I will always be grateful for this, because it's not a book I would have sought out for myself. The friend who gave it to me died young - which added a poignant element to seeking it out all these years later. Rereading it as an adult was an absolute pleasure. I think that a few elements in some recurring dreams (creepy ones) probably had their start in this book. Relatively slow burn. Opportunities for interpretation. ( )
  Ron18 | Feb 17, 2019 |
Read this one a while back...maybe even when Callie was little. Old dolls...attics...what's not to love? ( )
  Kim_Sasso | Mar 14, 2018 |
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for Michael and Timothy
Carol Bloom
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Today was the Anniversary: May fourteenth. (Prologue)
The man waiting at the station when she first stepped off the train was the tallest person she had ever seen.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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In the bleak, forbidding house of her great-aunts, neglected twelve-year-old orphan Maggie hears ghostly voices and finds magic that awakens in her the capacity to love and be loved.

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Book description
Maggie is twelve and hasn't felt truly loved since the death of her parents years before. In the home of her great-aunts, she finds a mysterious separate home where she makes friends and comes to care for the people she finds there. Deliciously mysterious and simultaneously heart-wrenching, this story is actually told as a flashback from the time when Maggie has been adopted into a family with two little sisters.

A quiet read, more for independent readers than for a group. Good for those YA/teen readers who enjoy sci-fi or fantasy, due to the magical time slip that makes the story possible.
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