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The Cherry Robbers

Audiobook
1 of 3 copies available
1 of 3 copies available

""Sarai Walker has done it again. With The Cherry Robbers she upends the Gothic ghost story with a fiery feminist zeal."" Maria Semple

The highly anticipated second novel from Sarai Walker, following her "slyly subversive" (EW) cult-hit Dietland—a feminist gothic about the lone survivor of a cursed family of sisters, whose time may finally be up.

IT SHOULD HAVE BEEN THE FIRST DAY OF THE REST OF THEIR LIVES.

INSTEAD IT WAS THE LAST.

Iris Chapel and her five elegant sisters, all of them heiresses to the Chapel firearms fortune, live cloistered in a lavish Victorian mansion. Neglected by both a distant, workaholic father and a mentally troubled mother—who believes their home is haunted by the victims of Chapel weapons—the sisters have grown up with only each other for company. They long to escape the eerie fairy tale of their childhood and move forward into the modern world, but for young women in 1950s Connecticut, the only way out is through marriage.

Yet it soon becomes clear that for the Chapel sisters, marriage equals death.

When the eldest sister walks down the aisle, tragedy strikes. The bride dies mysteriously the very next day, leaving her family and the town in shock. But this is just the beginning of a chain of disasters that will make each woman wonder whether true love will kill her, too. Only Iris, the second-youngest, finds a way to escape—but can she outrun the family curse forever?

Sarai Walker, the acclaimed author of the cult-hit novel Dietland, building off the Gothic tradition of Shirley Jackson, brings to life this riveting, deliciously twisted feminist tale, a gorgeous and provocative page-turner about the legacy of male power and the cost of female freedom.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 7, 2022
      The delightfully eerie latest from Walker (Dietland) follows a woman who reinvents herself after a painful childhood. The story begins with Sylvia Wren, a famous artist in her 80s, living in present-day Abiquiu, N.Mex., while her partner, Lola, is away in Brazil. Sylvia receives a letter from a journalist with questions about her past that threaten to reveal her true identity as Iris Chapel. Walker then flashes back to 1950s Connecticut, where Iris grows up with her five older sisters and a mother who has a habit of staring off into the woods and dropping her china before declaring she feels “something terrible” will happen. Their father, who isn’t around much, runs Chapel Firearms, and the women believe their house is haunted by those who were killed by the guns manufactured by the company. Walker does a great job weaving this thread of gothic mystery with revelations about the woman Iris becomes, a “haunted mother, haunted daughter.” A mix of bildungsroman and ghost story, the narrative gains strength as it illuminates its characters’ power of intuition, especially when they’re not afraid to use it. This uncanny tale of dark origins shines brightly. Agent: Alice Tasman, JVNLA.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      January LaVoy narrates a chilling audiobook, complete with ghosts, madness, and secrets. LaVoy channels Sylvia Wren, a world-famous, reclusive Arizona artist. Currently, she's being hounded by a journalist who's threatening to reveal her real identity: She is the heiress to the Chapel Firearms fortune, Iris Chapel. One-upping the reporter, Sylvia writes her own memoir, offering a disturbing look at her childhood, her domineering father, and her emotionally broken mother. LaVoy navigates the backstory smoothly, becoming each of the six doomed sisters and their Cassandra-like mother, who foresees "something terrible" for her daughters if they marry: "The Chapel sisters: First they get married; then they get buried." LaVoy's intimate breathy tones create the perfect gothic ambiance. Her delivery of the chilling details keeps listeners on edge. Intensely satisfying. S.J.H. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2022, Portland, Maine
    • Library Journal

      June 1, 2022

      In 2017, Sylvia Wren is one of the United States' premier artists but lives as a recluse in New Mexico. Then she's contacted by a persistent reporter, which is a problem since Wren is living under an assumed identity in an attempt to escape her past as Iris Chapel. In 1950, the six Chapel sisters were living affluent lives as heiresses, but their father was distant and their mother was haunted by ghosts--some her own, some being victims of the family's firearm business. Each of the Chapel girls longed to escape their home life, and the first two made it out by marrying before promptly dying. Iris escaped too, but how long can she avoid the family curse? Part gothic ghost story and part coming-of-age tale, Walker's epic novel has a modern feminist spin. The narration by January LaVoy provides a wistful look at the sepia-toned time of Iris's life, while also hinting at the more sinister aspects of being a Chapel sister. VERDICT Walker's (Dietland) second novel would be a great listen for fans of Jeffrey Eugenides's The Virgin Suicides and Shirley Jackson's The Haunting of Hill House.--Elyssa Everling

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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