After a bit of a rough start (I found the prose a little choppy at first), “The Schoolhouse” builds to a satisfying conclusion, melding
-an epistolary storyline occurring in 1975 and set mostly at the Schoolhouse, and
-a story set in 1990 as Detective Sergeant Sally Carter investigates a young girl’s disappearance.
On the surface, the two timelines don't appear to be connected, except they are, somewhat, through Isobel Williams.
Isobel is a librarian. She's deaf, and lives a life isolated from others, eschewing relationships, except the most transactional and impersonal. Her deafness is not the cause of her refusal to connect. Rather, her reasons for isolation are gradually revealed over the course of the 1975 diary entries, written by her, and the 1990 action.
Isobel's diary entries lay out the events at an unconventional, private, dysfunctional school, called The Schoolhouse. Isobel is eleven in 1975 and she describes her classmates and the staff, a few of whom are pretty cruel. Isobel babysits one of her classmates, Angie, who had Down Syndrome, after school. We learn something bad happened to Angie, and Isobel was also gravely injured then, leading to a loss of her hearing.
DS Carter begins the search for missing eleven-year old Caitlin, knowing that the longer the girl is not found, the outcome is not good. After the parents make an appeal through the media for help, Isobel realizes that she had seen Caitlin and another girl at the library where Isobel works. Feeling a duty to help, and to atone for her past, she contacts police, and DS Carter interviews her. Though the author does not elaborate, DS Carter has had experience with child services and the judicial system in her youth, and it's this that allows her to recognize something similar in Isobel. And leads DS Carter to not only pay attention to what Isobel said, but also to investigate her.
Author Sophie Ward brings the past and the two women's present together with the missing girl's case, but also with an individual from Isobel's past who comes back into it, setting off a series of violent incidents but also the reveal of a few big secrets in Isobel's life.
While I had a bit of trouble getting into the book, I found that once I had become accustomed to young Isobel's voice (in her cleverly written diary), adult Isobel's desire to avoid notice, and Sally Carter's thoughts as she worked to find Caitlin, Sophie Ward had grabbed my attention, and I began reading in earnest, wondering how the different story strands would resolve.
Despite my initial misgivings, I ended up really enjoying this book, and found myself eagerly turning pages so I could get to the satisfying conclusion.
Thank you to Netgalley and to Knopf, Pantheon, Vintage and Anchor for this ARC in exchange for my review.