Authors: Cornelia Read
Tags: #Fiction / Thrillers / Suspense, #FICTION / Crime, #Fiction / Family Life, #Fiction / Mystery & Detective - Women Sleuths, #Fiction / Thrillers / General
But the woman I had been did not survive losing my second-born daughter, although she is still very much alive as I write this, these many years later.
Long before the diagnosis, she was being spirited away. I hadn’t known it.
I will always
always
despise myself for that. For every moment of her that I squandered.
Everything since has been underscored by that heartbreak. All gains tempered by the dull impasto of that loss, and all light dimmed.
I would learn, quickly, that Setsuko meant nothing by comparison. Dean’s faithlessness even less.
I’m so glad I didn’t have to know all of it, that night: how very much sorrow I had yet to wade through. How much deeper into that ugly water I’d be forced to walk.
Until it was over my head, by fathoms and fathoms.
As it remains, and always will.
You do become accustomed to that, though not easily. Mimi was right.
But I couldn’t have borne having to comprehend
any
of what was yet to come, that night. Let alone all of it.
She was right about that, too.
Everyone’s past is filled with pain enough. We don’t need to see what’s yet to be endured.
I leaned down in the darkness, brushing my lips across Parrish’s, basking in the soft, sweet exhalation of her breath.
Like clover, like honey, like summer.
Fireflies. Innocence. Racing and tumbling barefoot across wide green lawns while the grown-ups watch over us, luminous in the porch light; shimmering and elegant, behind the screens.
Of course they’re there. We don’t have to look, sure they’ll keep us safe forever.
A blessing, not knowing all that we must lose. All that will be sacrificed.
I gave Parrish another kiss.
My darling girl.
My changeling.
T
his novel took far longer to write than I intended. Some excruciating stuff happened during the years it took me to finish it: my father committed suicide, I got divorced, and I moved from one coast of the country to another.
I am tremendously grateful for the grace, patience, and wisdom of my stellar agent Amy Rennert and my two magnificent editors at Grand Central Publishing, Celia Johnson and Emily Griffin. (Les Pockell, you too. We all miss you.)
My daughter Grace is just an entirely amazing person and friend. Also, she is
really
funny.
Without the heroic members of my writing group—Madeleine Butler, Karen Catalona, Daisy James, Sharon Johnson, Kirsten Saxton, and emeriti Charles King and Karen Murphy—this book would not exist, and neither would any claim to sanity I might have left.
Kelly Davidian very kindly vetted the fire stuff for me. She is awesome. I’m sure I’ve still made mistakes, but she did the very best she could to keep me from looking like a total idiot.
Candace Andrews and Rae Helmsworth and Andi Shechter and Ariel Zeitlin (alphabetically) were kind, thoughtful, and encouraging about this work. As they are about everything. I am damn lucky to have them as my pals.
I am also deeply thankful to my fellow bloggers and backbloggers at Murderati and The Lipstick Chronicles, because you all made me feel like I had “home” with me no matter where I was actually living.
There are many, many people who did yeoman work helping to maintain my mental equilibrium over the past three years. If you made me laugh or listened to me weep (on the phone or in person or by email) when the shit was hitting the fan and throughout the aftermath, you know who you are and I hope you know I seriously love you for it. That goes triple for you, Mom.
Riegert… dude, you rock.
And lastly, as promised, I’d very much like to thank Evyn Goldstein, the really cool kid I sat next to on the plane to Vancouver last summer, for making me laugh even though I didn’t get any sleep the night before. I hope you and your family had a really,
really
great time in China.
C
ORNELIA
R
EAD
grew up in New York, California, and Hawaii. A reformed debutante who currently lives in New York City, she is the author of three previous books:
A Field of Darkness, The Crazy School,
and
Invisible Boy.
To learn more about the author, you can visit her website at
CorneliaRead.com
.
1. The title of the novel comes from F. Scott Fitzgerald’s
The Great Gatsby
; Fitzgerald’s “valley of ashes” is a bleak stretch of land between New York City and the fictional West Egg. In what ways is Boulder also a “valley of ashes” in this novel, despite its altitude?
2. Almost from the outset of
Valley of Ashes
, we know that Madeline feels ill suited to her role as full-time mother and homemaker. Have you ever felt out-of-sorts in a life situation you had little ability to change?
3. Though Madeline is depressed, she is also extremely funny about her domestic frustrations. Is humor a defense mechanism for her? Or one of survival?
4. Have you ever worked for someone like Bittler? How did you handle a boss with that kind of personality?
5. What does the dinner scene with Dean and Cary’s Japanese colleagues tell you about the compromises that people make for the sake of business relationships? What would cross the line for you?
6. One of the book’s themes is the ongoing oppression of women, though the story takes place decades after the women’s movement
was launched. Which female characters serve as inspirations? Are there any cautionary examples?
7. Did the identity of Cary’s killer surprise you? In what ways does the murderer go against type?
8. By the end of the novel, a discovery has overshadowed Madeline’s grief over the loss of a friend and the slow dissolution of her marriage. Have you ever experienced a tragedy that has thrown other losses into relief?
9. Have you read other of the author’s Madeline Dare novels? How has Madeline changed over the course of four books? What about Dean?
A Field of Darkness
The Crazy School
Invisible Boy
“Funny and sad… a fast-paced, well-written book.”
—
Kirkus Reviews
“Wrenching… There’s an inevitable sense of doom throughout, which Read doles out in perfectly proportioned doses.”
—
Publishers Weekly
“I have been on the Cornelia Read bandwagon since her remarkable debut, but even my already ardent admiration didn’t prepare me for the heights she could achieve as a writer. VALLEY OF ASHES, like all the Madeline Dare books, is smart and surprising, acknowledging the cumulative power of Madeline’s troubled past while daring to suggest an even more challenging future. Riveting and devastating.”
—Laura Lippman
“A book you’ll love (if you like off-beat quirky characters). There is much about these books and characters that any family member will recognize. If you are not Madeline Dare, someone close to you is.”
—KillerNashville.com
“[T]he main character, Madeline Dare, is so fantastic it made the novel great… Madeline is one tough chick. Her attitude and demeanor… pulled me in and kept me turning the pages… anyone who appreciates a strong female lead should find this a satisfying read and be hunting your shelves for the previous novels.”
—BrodartVibe blog
“A great New York story.”
—Lee Child,
New York Post
“A superb novel… Read expertly evokes the New York City of the period… Equal parts toughness and vulnerability, Madeline is always a bracing heroine.”
—
Publishers Weekly
(starred review)
“Powerful… minces no words… a well-written, thought-provoking novel that will leave the reader pondering fate.”
—
Roanoke Times
“Read’s darkest, most passionate, and most poignant book yet… Madeline Dare is as razor-sharp, as feisty, and as dry-witted, as ever, but the stakes have gotten higher: This time the victim isn’t just one person, it’s all the world’s broken and betrayed children, and the danger can never be safely locked away.”
—Tana French,
New York Times
bestselling author
“[This book] does more than touch on the eternal themes of memory, regret, loss, and death—it incorporates them, making them live on the page.”
—BookReporter.com
“Read writes with infinite imagination. Her descriptive passages are striking, her dialogue spot on, her characters vivid, her storytelling superb… With remarkable originality, she scores again in a novel that transcends genre and leaves the reader spellbound by Maddie’s coarseness—and her compassion.”
—
Richmond Times-Dispatch
“Read has created some of the most vibrantly layered and complex characters I’ve seen in a long time… You won’t be able to put it down until you finish the last page!”
—
San Francisco Book Review
“How nice it is to hear that rebel voice [of Madeline Dare] again… The whodunit plot is funny and twisted.”
—
New York Times Book Review
“Read’s considerable wit and élan with first-person narration made
A Field of Darkness
an undeniable page-turner. Read repeats the recipe in
The Crazy School…
Read is developing into one of those original and confident voices worth reading wherever the plot may go… Just keep talking/writing, Ms. Dare/Read, and we’ll all keep listening/reading.”
—
San Francisco Chronicle
“A totally fun novel of gentle suspense…
The Crazy School
distinguishes itself not so much as a mystery story, but as a hip excursion into the claustrophobic world of a pricey private school… Madeline’s edgy narrative voice lingers long after the last scream has been scrum.”
—
Washington Post
“Read’s smart second offering starring witheringly witty debutante Madeline Dare… another swiftly plotted mystery peppered with wonderful one-liners… a must-read.”
—
Booklist
(starred review)
“Like its predecessor,
The Crazy School
is a classic whodunit with an enormously appealing heroine… hilarious, but the appeal here is the mystery… and Read’s continuing development of damaged, lovable Maddie. You’d be nuts to miss it.”
—
Richmond Times-Dispatch
“Caustic, gripping, and distinctive… another bitterly amusing mystery… Read borrows elements from different genres to craft a strange, compelling narrative… Madeline’s a great character, and her creator is a great storyteller… intelligent entertainment.”
—
Kirkus Reviews
“Gutsy… Read graphically depicts the depressing underside of a supposedly elite private school.”
—
Publishers Weekly
“Read succinctly mixes wit and sarcasm with social commentary… character-rich plot… humor that is well-placed, but never glib… Madeline makes for an unusual, yet very real, character… Readers will learn what a talent Read is with her clever
The Crazy School
.”
—
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
“An equally compelling new offering… Read’s novel is fast-paced; once the action starts, don’t even think about putting it down. The motives behind the murders are complex, and the ultimate heroes and bad guys are a total surprise. Strongly recommended.”
—
Library Journal
(starred review)
“Spellbinding.”
—
New York Times Book Review
“Sparks seem to fly off the pages… powered by a sensational narrator’s voice… Read is a big talent.”
—
Boston Globe
“A remarkable debut [that] will please both mystery and literary fiction readers.”
—
Cleveland Plain Dealer
“A pleasure… venomously witty… Read’s plot crackles and pops, but her characters steal the show.”
—
Booklist
(starred review)
“Don’t miss this one… a rare gem.”
—
Denver Rocky Mountain News
“Fascinating… a sensational debut.”
—
Kirkus Review
(starred review)
“Read’s novel brims with verve and vitality.”
—
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
“[Read] writes in an original voice, as convincingly about working stiffs as society types, and Madeline is so full-bodied that she makes most of the current chick-lit heroines seem ghostly by comparison.”
—
Denver Post
“Read is a delight to, well… read. One hopes this is the first in what will be a very prolific writing career.”
—
Library Journal
(starred review)
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