Book Review:The Broken Girls
by Mary Beth Newbill, Southern History Department , Central Library The Broken Girls Simone St. James I completely devoured Simone St. James’s latest novel over the course of a weekend. If you’re a fan of spooky, gothic mysteries get this book immediately. It has all the right elements: an abandoned girls’ school that may or may not be haunted, two murders, romance, an escaped Nazi war criminal, a crooked small town police force, and an overall atmosphere of foreboding. Most of the novel, which is set in a small Vermont town, takes place in and around the ruins of Idlewilde Hall. Idlewilde was once a boarding school for wayward girls. Girls who, according to the standards of the early to mid-20th century, were in need of stern discipline in order to become proper wives and mothers. The story shifts from present day back to 1950. In the present day, Fiona Sheridan is a journalist obsessed with her sister’s murder. After 20 years, Fiona is still bothered by the details of how