
The protagonists-living and dead-are distinctly characterized a once beautiful, now weed-choked garden is simultaneously setting and symbol of lost happiness. From material that might have become melodrama in less skilled hands, Buffie (The Warnings, 1991, etc.) creates a tightly knit, evocatively written, and lushly (but chastely) romantic thriller. She also intercedes with her self-absorbed parents to free herself and her troubled younger sisters from the burden of their neglect. Illness, insanity-or a haunting? With help from a sympathetic clergyman and a young, handsome neighbor, Thea uncovers and, in part, relives a long-ago tragedy involving a romantic triangle, a murder, and a madman. She sees evanescent figures, hears voices, and even seems to be someone else at times. She knows their old house, but her memories belong to another time, long before her family lived there.

Released from the hospital, she returns as a stranger to a dysfunctional family she doesn't remember. Originally published in Canada, a first-rate blend of a ghost story and problem novel about Thea, 16, struggling to recover from traumatic amnesia after a bike accident.
