Seeds of Yesterday (Dollanganger Series #4) by V. C. Andrews, Linda Marrow (Editor)

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(Mass Market Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: November 1990
  • 416pp
  • Sales Rank: 13,209
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    Reader Rating: (43 ratings)

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    • Overview
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: November 1990
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
    • Format: Mass Market Paperback, 416pp
    • Sales Rank: 13,209

    Synopsis

    The final, haunting novel, in the extraordinary story that has enthralled millions!

    The horror began with Flowers in the Attic, the terrifying tale of four innocent children locked away from the world by a cruel mother.

    The shocking fury continued with Petals on the Wind and If There be Thorns. Now V.C. Andrews has created the last dark chapter in the strange, chilling tale of passion and peril.


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    Biography

    "The face of fear I display in my novels is not the pale specter from the sunken grave, nor is it the thing that goes bump in the night," V. C. Andrews once told Douglas E. Winter. "Mine are the deep-seated fears established when we are children, and they never quite go away: the fear of being helpless, the fear of being trapped, the fear of being out of control."

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    Customer Reviews

    Tells the story in a different point of viewby Betzy

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    November 21, 2009: When Corrinne Foxworth died, she left her family mansion, Foxworth Hall, to her oldest son, Christopher, but only until her gandson, Bart's twenty-fifth birthday. Now, in the fourth addition in the Dollanganger Series, Bart comes to take ownership of Foxworth Hall, and he invites his entire family(His parents, Jory, Jory's wife, his sister,as well as the long-lost uncle Joel) to come celebrate with him. Christopher and Catherine agree to celebrate with their child, and return once again to Foxworth Hall, the house that they spent three years of their childhood trapped in. After discovering the truth about his parent's relationship, Bart resents his father and turns to his evil grandparents. Uncle Joel bares striking similarities to John Amos, 'Grandmother's' butler in If There Be Thorns. Together the two begin to terrorize the entire family. As Catherine watches in horror, the family legacy of incest, greed, and betrayal claim the lives of her children

    Fillerby Anonymous

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    November 15, 2008: SOY is told from Cathy's point of view. This is a book you might want to read if you're interested in knowing more about Cathy, Chris, Bart and family. Nothing really important happens in the book. Sure, there's lots of drama and a heartbreaking ending, but really, it felt like V.C. Andrews was forced to write a fourth book so she went and stuffed this new story full of more of the same. It's like FITA all over again, only Cathy and Chris are now adults and no one is really forcing them to stay trapped in Foxworth
    Hall---they just feel emotionally imprisoned. There's even a John Amos/Malcolm clone, as if we hadn't gotten enough of that the first few times around. And there's no real plot, it's just one bad thing happening after another. Bart is interesting to read about (he's a complex villain) but the rest of the characters are dull. Cathy and Chris's relationship has been seriously watered-down. The ending is contrived.


    So I would not recommend this unless you absolutely must finish the series. I admit I liked it at age 15, but over time, I came to realize it was really not that great.

    I give the characters 2/5, the plot 2/5, the writing style a 1 or 2 out of five, originality a 1/5, the drama a 3/5 (though I found it to be cheap drama), and the romance a 1 or 2 out of 5. It is good for a rainy day.

    I recommend FITA, in case you haven't read it already. I also recommend the V.C.A. masterpiece My Sweet Audrina. It's a bit confusing at times and a very strange tale, but I thought it was very good. And I recommend the short story The Fall of the House of Usher because it has that sort of gothic feel to it, though it's more of a ghost story.

    I Also Recommend: The Fall of the House of Usher and Other Tales, Flowers in the Attic (Dollanganger Series #1), My Sweet Audrina.


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