Friday, September 14, 2012

The Crazy School by Cornelia Read (Review and a Ramble)

Publication Date: January, 2008

Publisher: Grand Central Publishing

Genre: Mystery (Amateur Sleuth)

Why I Chose It: Another random library find; it caught my eye because of the title. :) I grabbed it because of my weakness for mysteries with amateur sleuths and because, perusing the first few pages of the prequel, A Field of Darkness, the author's style caught my fancy.

Rating: (4/5 Stars)

 I'm curious about what readers think of the new format of my book reviews. I thought this would include a bit more relevant information. Also, since I tend to write relatively long reviews, with excerpts to offer examples of the author's writing, I thought the synopsis might be a good option for readers who prefer reading reviews that are more concise. Opinions?? :)

Synopsis of My Review:

Madeline Dare and her husband, Dean, have finally left his native land, in the rust belt of Syracuse, New York, and moved to the Berkshire Mountains of Massachusetts. Maddie becomes a history teacher at Santangelo Academy, a boarding school for emotionally disturbed teenagers.  This bizarre institution forces a sort of milieu therapy -- if you want to dignify it by calling it "therapy" -- on the staff as well as the clients. And its treatment of its young clients crosses the line into abusive and bizarre.

Maddie is appalled to see her fellow teachers led by Dr. Santangelo's strange blend of charisma and intimidation -- they turn on each instead of standing up for themselves and protecting the vulnerable students in their care. After a tragic event, trusting only her frustrated and bewildered husband, her friend Lulu, and several of the academy's troubled and rebellious students, Maddie digs for the truth.
 
This is the second novel in Read's Madeline Dare series, which began with A Field of Darkness. This is a character-driven mystery series, and for me, Madeline is the real hook. She's my kind of heroine: confused and vulnerable as well as tough and edgy.  It's also a solid mystery. The kind I like, with an intriguing "whodunnit," red herrings, and an intrepid sleuth. Read's mysteries rate among my current favorites, and I look forward to finishing the series.

Full Review: 

Madeline Dare and her husband, Dean, have finally left his native land, in the rust belt of Syracuse, New York, and moved to the Berkshire Mountains of Massachusetts. Maddie becomes a history teacher at Santangelo Academy, a boarding school for emotionally disturbed teenagers.  This bizarre institution forces a sort of milieu therapy -- if you want to dignify it by calling it "therapy" -- on the staff as well as the clients. And its treatment of its young clients crosses the line into abusive and bizarre.

Maddie is appalled to see her fellow teachers led by Dr. Santangelo's strange blend of charisma and intimidation -- they turn on each instead of standing up for themselves and protecting the vulnerable students in their care. After a tragic event, trusting only her frustrated and bewildered husband, her friend Lulu, and several of the academy's troubled and rebellious students, Maddie digs for the truth.
 
This is the second novel in Read's Madeline Dare series, which began with A Field of Darkness. This is a character-driven mystery series, and for me, Madeline is the real hook. She's my kind of heroine: confused and vulnerable as well as tough and edgy. Her conversations with her history students offer an opportunity to explore Madeline's off-beat childhood, based on the author's own history. She was born into the last generation of an old, wealthy WASP family and raised by divorced hippie-renegade parents. Her childhood memories included single moms, exploited farm workers, draft dodgers, and Black Panthers. And while my background is very different -- no old WASP money and fewer hippies and radicals -- I identify with Madeline. I relate to her combination of compassionate strength and confused vulnerability, her progressive political leanings, and her edgy sense of humor. I also enjoyed Madeline's rapport with and evident compassion for her students.

The premise -- a dysfunctional school for troubled teens -- definitely helped piqued my interest in this book. I spent years working as a counselor with "emotionally disturbed" and "at risk" youth. Between that and being the mom of a kid on the autism spectrum and a child with severe mental illness, I have plenty of opinions about so-called care for needy youth and families. Believe me. 

There were moments when the events in the Santangelo school might have felt over the top, even given the suspension of disbelief that goes with reading mysteries. However, to convince myself this wasn't too far in left field, I only needed to look back at some of my own experiences. Treating children and teens, especially those with "differences," as unworthy of respect is sadly all too common. Almost mundane.

Of course, there are also issues I've read about. Like the case of Rotenberg Educational Center in Massachusetts which recently hit the media, where electric shock is regularly used on students with autism. Not to mention revelations about the recently discredited Bruno Bettleheim, the untrained psychoanalytic "genius" who convinced generations of "experts" that autism is caused by cold, unresponsive mothering. Granted, his work was in the past, but his school for disturbed youth -- which has been revealed to have subjected students to physical and emotional abuse -- still has defenders. There are plenty of other stories about therapeutic schools and the special education system. I'll stop now.

Compared to all that, the events at Santangelo Academy are not only believable but incredibly tame. And I need only re-read my friends' reviews of Compliance to be reminded that people will go to extraordinary lengths to comply with perceived authority figures.

While the characters are what I found most engaging, this is also a solid mystery. The kind I like, with an intriguing "whodunnit," red herrings, and an intrepid and often floundering sleuth. Read's mysteries rate among my current favorites, and I look forward to finishing the series.

Other Reviews: Lesa's Book Critiques; Joanne at The Book Zombie; Casey at Bookworm 4 Life; Reading Rants! Out of the Ordinary Teen Booklists; Semicolon

2 comments:

  1. interesting review...I am going to email it to a friend of mine who loves books like this.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I grabbed A Field of Darkness from the library based off of your review. I didn't even catch the fact that this was a series but I'm excited to read it now more than ever. These books sound like ones that I will enjoy!

    ReplyDelete

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