This story is unsettling in the best way possible. It is uncomfortable to go through, especially if you are the kind of person who has an unhealthy fear of public humiliation and social ostracization, but the relief that comes with the ending is well worth it.
Annie and her family just moved to town during the Second World War period. She attends a private girls school and immediately she's picked up by an outcast named Elsie. Elsie is rude, demanding, and kind of evil... and she's determined to be Annie's friend, her only friend, thorough whatever means necessary. Annie on the other hand, wants to be accepted by the other girls, who first ostracized Annie because she is associated with Elsie.
When Elsie became sick and could not attend school, Annie had the chance to make friends with the rest of the girls. Then Elsie got well, and she saw Annie become friends with the other girls who hated her and she was all alone again.
The 1918 Spanish Flu broke out and took Elsie's life. She became a ghost and haunted Annie and made her life a living hell.
Bullying is a recurring theme of the story. This is going to be very unpopular, but Elsie is the bully here (not the other girls who ganged together to ostracize her). She is both the bully, and the victim of her own actions. And I don't believe the latter is reason for forgiving the former.
To make my point, this is some of the things she did to Annie:
- not letting her making friends with others, insisting she's the only friend Annie needs
- lying and creating misunderstandings to make others hate Annie, this putting distance between Annie and everyone else
- invading her personal space, from grabbing her hand to going into her bedroom when Annie clearly does not want to do that but can't find way to say it nicely
- breaking/hurting the things Annie cares for, from her treasured doll to the friends she doesn't want to harm, in order to punish Annie
- always playing the victim, saying garbage such as "my mother died and/or doesn't love me" and "my house isn't as nice as yours" and "I never had any friends"
These behaviors are extremely sociopathic. The main character is a young girl who doesn't have any experience in dealing with people like her. Annie and the other girl don't owe her friendship or kindness or anything else. They ostracized her for a reason, and that reason is to protect themselves.
This book's intended audience is probably someone who's is the main character's age. Books that are aimed at a younger audience usually has a message, a life lesson of some sort. I can't help ponder what that message is, and I thinkmaybe it's not sending the right message to the right people....
The following has spoilers.
From Annie's perspective, she ditched Elsie as a friend (because she's truly horrible) and then Elsie came back as a ghost to exact revenge by bullying her a hundred fold, to the point people thought Annie became crazy and sent her to an institution. So, what exactly is the message here? You can't pick your own friends? You can't ditch someone who's abusive to you? You have to be nice and understanding to sociopathic bullies? And to solve this "problem", Annie had to try to be her friend and understand her?! What the heck?! If a girl had a stalker, would you tell her to try to make friends with the stalker and understand the creep?
From Elsie's perspective, she was aggressive, rude, controlling, and actively seeked to harm someone she's trying to make friends with. When she gets rejected, she comes back and make that person's life a living hell in the name of revenge. Eventually someone comes along and takes her to a better place. So what's the message here? You can be a bully, but when others reject you because of your own actions it's their fault? And that gives you the right to hurt them to the most extreme degree? And then someone who understands you will magically appear and take you to a better place and everything will be alright?
That's the lesson I'm getting from the book. It's really not a message on how one should behave in life.
From my points above, I really don't think this book is suitable for younger children. But for an adult who can recognize the signs of a sociopathic bully, it's an utterly exhilarating read! I think it can be made into a great movie, because it had a great psychological aspect. It can be up there with the classics in the horror thiller genre. I'm getting strong "The Shining" vibes.
No adult fictional thiller has made me feel anything for a long time. And for that, I'm giving it five stars!