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The Ruins

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A suspenseful, feminist Gothic coming-of-age tale with shades of Patricia Highsmith, Rebecca, and Atonement, pitched against the sun-soaked backdrop of a summer holiday on the French Riviera.

Welcome to the Chateau des Sètes, a jewel of the Cote d’Azur, where long summer days bring ease, glamour, and decadence to the holidaymakers who can afford it.

Ruby Ashby adores her parents’ house in France, but this August, everything feels different. Unexpected guests have descended upon the chateau––friends of her parents, and their daughters―and they are keen to enjoy the hot, extravagant summer holiday to its fullest potential. Far from England, safe in their wealth and privilege, the adults revel in bad behavior without consequence, while the girls are treated as playthings or abandoned to their own devices. But despite languid days spent poolside and long nights spent drinking, a simmering tension is growing between the families, and the sanctuary that Ruby cherishes soon starts to feel like a gilded cage.

Over two decades later the chateau is for sale, its days of splendor and luxury long gone, leaving behind a terrible history and an ugly legacy. A young widow has returned to France, wanting to purchase the chateau, despite her shocking memories of what transpired that fateful summer. But there is another person who is equally haunted by the chateau, and who also seeks to reclaim it. Who will set the chateau free––and who will become yet another of its victims?

With riveting psychological complexity, The Ruins captures the glittering allure of the Mediterranean―and the dark shadows that wait beneath the surface.

400 pages, Hardcover

First published July 5, 2022

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8916 people want to read

About the author

Phoebe Wynne

3 books221 followers
Phoebe Wynne studied Classics at Royal Holloway, University of London and Education at King’s College, London. She worked in education for eight years, teaching Classics in the south of England as well as English Language and Literature in Paris, France. Phoebe left the classroom to focus on her writing; she went on to hone her craft in writing classes in Los Angeles and in London.

Phoebe has dual British and French nationality and spends her time between England and France. ‘MADAM’ is her debut novel.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 207 reviews
Profile Image for Liz.
2,829 reviews3,738 followers
June 1, 2022
3.5 stars, rounded down
The Ruins is billed as a gothic coming of age story. Gothic seems a weird adjective, as it takes place in 1985. It covers an affluent English family who have a chateau in Southern France. While hosting friends, a car accident occurs. The story is told from the perspective of young Ruby, the 12 year old only child. The adults all seem to be vying for the “Worst Parent” award. They ignore or belittle the three young women. In one case, a daughter is literally left behind. The adults drink to excess, fight constantly. These are just ugly people, despite their supposed good breeding. The story deals with the haves and the have nots, the sense of privilege, of being able to get away with things because of one’s position.
Years later, Mrs. Cosgrove arrived back in the French town with the intention of buying the chateau. We aren’t told who she is, but it’s apparent she’s one of the young girls.
The story crept up on me. The adults are all so horrible, so cringe worthy that I didn’t want to be in their company. But still…I wanted to see how it would all play out. Would anyone be held accountable for their actions? In some way, it reminded me of “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” with all the fighting. It’s a very disturbing ending and I can’t say it totally worked for me.
Warning - there are overtones of pedophilia. There are also incidents of child abuse.
My thanks to netgalley and St. Martin’s Press for an advance copy of this book.
Profile Image for Erin Clemence.
1,537 reviews416 followers
June 26, 2022
Special thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for a free, electronic ARC of this novel received in exchange for an honest review.

Expected publication date: July 6, 2022

Ruby Ashby is excited to be returning to her parents’ estate in France, but this year a slew of unexpected (and not particularly welcome ) guests are out to ruin Ruby’s summer. Not only is she forced to share a room with two girls, Imogen and Annie, neither of whom she really knows, but her favourite place is filled to the brim with bickering adults full of smoldering tension. Ruby’s father can’t ask them to leave, for reasons Ruby doesn’t yet know, and just when Ruby thinks it’s over, a life-changing event occurs and soon, all of them are tied together with secrets and lies.

Phoebe Wynne’s debut novel, “Madam”, was a delight for me and I was beyond excited to receive her newest novel, “The Ruins”. A gothic, coming-of-age novel of suspense, I enjoyed the deliciously lavish French estate and its glamorous setting, but the rest of the novel was something more mediocre than I was expecting.

The novel is told in two time periods, in 1985 when Ruby is going on twelve and she is spending the summer at her French estate, and in 2010 when a woman (identified in the story at first only as “Mrs. Cosgrove”) returns to France in hopes of purchasing the long-abandoned estate, and recalls her memories of the tragedy that happened there.

Right off the bat, the plotline seemed anachronistic to me. The story was set in the last forty years, but it felt like something from the Victorian era. The guests, and obviously the owners, of the French estate were uber wealthy, but even taking this into consideration it felt a little out of place. The elaborate clothing required for every day (not just dinners), that had all of the females in full dresses and skirts ALL THE TIME and the only modern day convenience that was ever mentioned was a DVD player and television set. It had a Great Gatsby vibe, but the story lost Fitzgerald’s charm when it entered the twentieth century. This was a tale destined for eras long ago, and I wish Wynne had made this happen.

Ruby was a little firecracker of a character, and I adored her immensely, although her parents (and the parents of all of the other girls in the chateau at the time) were desperately lacking and inattentive, leading to the traumatic events that happen when young, preteen girls are left unsupervised around perverted old men. The only characters worth their salt, excluding Ruby, was terribly naive Annie, oblivious Liv and sassy Imogen.

I enjoyed the end of this novel, but parts in the middle had me scrambling to find a reason to finish it. I was glad to make it to the end, though, and felt a sense of satisfaction in the ending itself. Although a decidedly readable novel, “The Ruins” fell short of my expectations.
Profile Image for Bam cooks the books.
2,306 reviews322 followers
June 30, 2022
*3-3.5 stars. The story begins in 1985 at a chateau in Provence, France, owned by the Ashby family of England. They have several friends visiting for the summer--old school chums who have brought along their families as well as their past grievances.

The story is told mainly from the point of view of the Ashby's daughter, Ruby, who is just turning twelve. She is frightfully neglected by her parents, pretty much ignored except to be scolded and disciplined. Ruby is aware of the dangerous undertones that summer, many of them sexual, but is too young to completely understand the adult interactions. There are three other young girls there that summer, all on the cusp of womanhood and attracting some unwanted attention with their budding figures. Their parents seem blissfully unaware--or is it they just don't care? Is there anyone a girl can turn to for protection?

Suddenly the story shifts to 2010. The chateau is up for sale and one of those young girls from that summer, now a recent widow, has come back to buy it. She finds she has competition from a man who is investigating what truly happened that long ago summer.

As the author notes at the beginning of her book, the theme of the story is the emotional and sexual abuse of young girls--'the darkest moments of the female experience.' But the story also delves into how the wealthy class finds ways to cover up their crimes.

The story is atmospheric and creepy. The chateau on the sea was once magnificent but is now deteriorating from the lack of the funds for upkeep, as these old friendships are also crumbling. Because the story is told by a confused child, it is clouded by innuendo. Obviously the story would have ended differently if Ruby had had loving, doting parents, someone she could have turned to. Shameful!

NB: I received an arc of this new novel from the publisher via NetGalley. Many thanks to them for the opportunity. Two thumbs up for the lovely cover art. My review is voluntary and the opinions expressed are my own.
Profile Image for Meredith.
101 reviews5 followers
December 7, 2021
Thank you to NetGalley and the publishers for a digital copy of this ARC in exchange for an honest review.

OOOOOF. I really think this book needs to come with a warning about some of the topics, not in a censorship way but in a trigger-warning way. I was really interested in the story based on the description, but what was written seemed to veer off course from the summary. The sexual abuse, the neglect, the rampant alcoholism, the nearly Stockholm Syndrome situation that transpires...it was a lot. I kept having to double check that the 1980s was considered the "early" timeline, because everything felt much earlier in the century. It felt very 1920s or 1950s in the 80s timeline, and very 60s or 70s in the 2010 timeline. This was a tough read to finish, because of the content and what happens in the conclusion. I was left pretty disturbed after I finished, and I kept replaying the climax/conclusion over and over in my head, not because I was savoring it. Rather, I was trying to wrap my head around writing such a climax/conclusion and how disturbed I was by the content. I can't say I would recommend this book because it's...a lot.
42 reviews1 follower
December 13, 2021
Perhaps there are many books written like this. About horrible people who are negligent parents. People who treat other people badly and let their children be abused sexually and emotionally by their friends and do nothing about it. I was shocked, that a press actually accepted this book. There was no plot, no moral, just one horrible day of drunken abuse after another. Wynne is a good writer, but why she felt compelled to write this book, I have no idea. I can't recommend this book.
Profile Image for Krista | theliterateporcupine.
718 reviews14 followers
June 14, 2022
This highly anticipated book was easily the worst read of the year for me. I enjoyed Wynn's debut thriller last year because it was dark and twisty, but this was a whole new level of uncomfortableness. I was ready to dnf it so many times, but wanted to finish reading so I could rate it honestly.

- The parents were all trash. The fathers were drunk and ignored the sexual abuse of their daughters that happened right before their eyes. The mothers were completely oblivious, weak female characters, and had no love for their children.
- The summary makes this book sound like a gothic horror novel, with lots of secrets waiting to be uncovered. It's obvious what those secrets are, so when they are revealed, it wasn't exciting.
- There we're multiple scenes where the adolescent girls were sexually abused. I was physically sick reading about it and had to skip over those parts. I'm not one to shy away from gore, but those scenes were so upsetting to read about and there wasn't any prior warning.
- I didn't really understand the point of the modern day storyline, set in 2010. I knew immediately whose point of view it was told from, so that wasn't a plot twist.

Disgusting, Disappointing, and Upsetting, I recommend this book to no one.

TW: sexual abuse of minors (multiple times), attempted rape of a minor, child abuse
Profile Image for Fiona MacDonald.
809 reviews198 followers
February 16, 2023
I adored this. Great story with such a growing sense of unease it made me genuinely uncomfortable. All this darkness happening beneath a sultry, claustrophobic summer in a French chateau that ends in tragedy. I didn’t want this to end.
Profile Image for Bandit.
4,946 reviews579 followers
September 20, 2022
I liked Wynne’s debut, Madam, so I was interested in checking out her sophomore effort. And well…what a disappointment. Not just a dud, not just a read that dismays, but the one that actively causes disgust. (more on that later). I’d love to be able to say that you can see the traces of Madam in here and that the book merely missed something, but that would be a lie. Because this obnoxious, tedious, pretentious stab at a murder thriller is a sad excuse and a waste of talent/promise, etc.
Yeah, sorry, this is harsh, but the thing is, I hated this book. In concept more so than in the execution, meaning objectively Wynne CAN write, she just needs stronger stories.
Meaning, a tale of a bunch of young girls vacationing with their utter disgusting parents and family friends isn’t that strong of a story.
Sure, Wynne dragged it out into one, but she did so by selecting the nastiest aspects of it and dragging it out into a very specific brand of tedium.
And now, for some specifics: this is a book about child abuse. (And no, I’m not one of those squeamish readers who only wants tales from the sunny side of life; fact is, I usually prefer the other kind, but…) The adults in this story are TERRIBLE.
You have three male friends from way back and their respective families, wives, kids, all of it. All are wealthy English, vacationing in the French chateau belonging to one of them. And yes, it’s set back in the mid 80s and yes, the British are notoriously withholding and polite and all that, but at least one of the adults exhibits active peado behaviour, molesting girl after girl, often in plain view of others, including the kids’ parents and no one says Boo, or if they do, it’s barely a reprimand, more like…Oh, you. It’s just him being himself, etc. And this goes on and on and ON.
The bulk of the story takes place in the past and that’s most of the past.
Adults bicker, fight, and misbehave and kids cower in terror of them. On repeat. Yey, what fun, Wynne, what fun.
And while Wynne can indeed write, here she very deliberately chooses a very tedious, poshly pretentious tone of the upstairs portion of the upstairs/downstairs dynamic that makes the novel read like something decades and decades older than it is.
The overall effect is obnoxious (stupid?), like teens who dye their hair grey.
Also, because of all the childrens’ perspectives, the novel reads oddly young at the same time.
And slow, so very slow. Same thing repeat over and over, after we long established the adults are perverts, and the kids are playing out their own dramas that read like BBC historical tv series at their most drawn-out and maudlin.
This entire novel is a stuck up fifth digit holding up a starched crisp serviette. Affected pretension personified. With not enough of a story to excuse itself. Infuriating. Slow. Frustrating. Waste of time. Pass. Thanks Netgalley.

This and more at https://advancetheplot.weebly.com/
Profile Image for Melanie.
69 reviews1 follower
November 28, 2021
To begin, thank you to Phoebe Wynn, publisher, and Goodreads for an ARC I received thru winning a Goodreads giveaway. I appreciate it!

I was really excited to begin this book and started it the day I received it in the mail. From the provided overview of the story, I was expecting a thriller. However, I stopped reading multiple times to reread the summary provided on the back of the book. What I was reading didn't match up with the description for me. Also, I was unable to continue to reading and DNF this book due to the story including sexual abuse of children. If I had know this was a part of this story, I would not have entered the goodreads giveaway.
560 reviews26 followers
August 16, 2022
This may be a hard book for some to read. Its main theme is about horrible, shallow, rich parents who couldn’t care less about their token children, and children who are abused, physically, mentally, and sadly, sexually, by these disgusting, spoiled drunkards.
Now that I’ve got that out of the way, I have to admit I enjoyed the tense pace of this book. It’s written in a way that you know these parents are going to get their comeuppance, you just don't know exactly how.
Part of the story dwells on one particular summer at the chateau when friends of Ruby’s parents invite themselves and then just won’t leave. The other part, over twenty years later, dwells on a visitor to the town; a widow who displays a strong dislike for actually seeing the chateau, but is insistent on purchasing it.
My interest was piqued as these two stories unfold over time. The events of the summer were hard to read, but their basis is required for the current-day efforts of the strange visitor. Occasionally, I enjoy a book that pushes me out of my comfort zone, and this is one of those books. I thought it was well written, honest, and upfront about crimes that are swept under the rug every single day in any country.
Thanks so much to St. Martin’s Press- Minotaur for an ARC in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Elaine.
2,078 reviews1 follower
August 22, 2022
Thank you to NetGalley for an ARC of The Ruins.

No star reviews were made for books like The Ruins as well as anything by Alex Michaelides.

I'm always baffled when authors write stories revolving around the most heinous of characters: pedophiles and sexual predators.

You just know it's not going to turn out well for anyone.

The Ruins was not a good book; not in tone or content, not in character or style.

And I'm using very kind language to describe how unpleasant and a HUGE waste of time it was reading this.

If you have nothing to do and want to read 300 pages about privileged, self entitled, boozy, male predators leering and making disgusting comments over prepubescent girls, then read Ruins.

If you want to read about horrible adults behaving badly (and I do mean really badly), getting drunk, getting wasted, mothers ignoring their daughters' fears and concerns, then read Ruins.

If you want to read 300 pages of sleazy exposition that is just basically filler (the action doesn't reveal itself until the last 10 pages), then read Ruins.

What are the odds that the main character's father's friends are all sexual predators?

How this got published is beyond me. There was nothing redeeming about the story, the characters, nothing. NADA.

Well, if Alex Michaelides still manages to astonish readers, then nothing is impossible.

I wish we could fine every editor/PR team for calling a book Gothic, because I'm convinced no one really knows what the word means.

The Ruins isn't Gothic, feminist or empowering; it was just a sad, bitter, unnecessary tale filled with deeply abhorrent people.
Profile Image for Tami.
1,073 reviews
June 13, 2022
This book is the train wreck that you cannot look away from. Full of despicable characters and three vulnerable young girls, I found myself invested in the story just to make sure that nothing happened to the girls.

Set on the Cote d’ Azur in a French chateau, the Ashby family and several of their so-called “friends” spend their holiday beachside while drinking and arguing. Several of the men are guilty of inappropriate behavior towards the young girls. The parents of the girls were selfishly into themselves and completely oblivious to what their daughters were going through. Money, or lack thereof, was a focus of many of the arguments.

The holiday was a ticking time bomb that eventually blew up with catastrophic consequences. I’ll admit, I was a bit shocked at the ending. For such a dreamy setting, this holiday was a nightmare and the title is very befitting of the way the holiday ended.

Many thanks to NetGalley and St. Martins Press for allowing me to read an advance copy and offer my honest review.
Profile Image for Emma.
956 reviews44 followers
July 7, 2022
"She pictured three girls bound tightly together in the back seat of the car, holding each other. Their hot breath, clammy palms, and her overshadowing fear of the man at the front, the man driving. "

The Ruins is a story about family, secrets, legacy and trauma that explores the events of a long, dark summer that can’t be forgotten. Behind the idyll of a beautiful chateau in the French Riviera and the scorching heat of the summer sun are dark shadows, cracks in the bright facade, and things hurtle towards that fateful night that can never be undone…

The book opens with a note from the author warning the reader of what we are about to read and offering those who would rather stay away from the dark but timely subject matter on these pages. I think this was a good move as it serves as both a content warning and sets the tone for what’s to come. Then comes the prologue with all of its ominous intrigue and the scene is set for this hauntingly atmospheric novel that I couldn’t put down.

"When was it, she asked herself, that her youthful joy turned sour, when this strange exterior rose up and crystallised around her? She knew exactly. It was that summer."

Though I have her debut on my shelves, this was my first time reading one of Phoebe Wynne’s books. Her writing is alluring, immersive and almost dreamlike, making me feel like there was a haze that lingered over every word as I read. The subject she examines in this story is a timely but difficult one that feels all too human and familiar. Wynne writes with understanding, sensitivity and honesty, making it hard to read in places but never gratuitous. I also liked how she wove Greek Mythology into the story. Wynne cleverly uses them as an analogy of what is happening that summer and as someone who loves the myths it made the story all the more enjoyable to read.

"All the stories from that summer had haunted her - all those women, tossed about for the desire and ambition of their male counterparts. Those had seemed to repeat themselves through her life, like some infectious, cruel joke."

This layered and nuanced story is composed of dual timelines that are expertly plotted and paced to keep you guessing. As the events of the summer of 1985 slowly unfold we move between timelines, jumping forward to 2010 when one of the young girls has returned to France to confront the trauma that has haunted her all these years. There is an air of foreboding and mystery in this timeline that adds a sinister tension to the past narrative as we try to guess what happened all those years ago. The author seamlessly weaves the narratives together, making them collide in unexpected ways. And that ending! A punch-to-the-gut finale that made me gasp out loud in shock and horror.

"Mrs Cosgrove woke up agitated; she had dreamed about the château again. That grand house perched by the water, tinged with sunlight and heat. The memory of it was permanently lodged in her mind, like an azure blue aneurysm, sharp and painful with every blink."

There is a cast of vividly drawn and recognisable characters, of which the adults are hideous, possessing few redeeming qualities and displaying monstrous behaviour that is a stark contrast to the innocence of the young girls. Our young protagonist, Ruby, lives in a time when children are expected to blindly obey their elders and be seen and not heard and the adults’ abhorrent behaviour is protected by this, as well as a culture of secrets, shame, propriety and obedience. The fear, isolation and claustrophobia that the girls feel is palpable and it is impossible not to feel horrified at the lack of parental care given to these children and how terribly each of them was failed by the adults they trusted. I wanted to leap into the book and rescue each of them from their nightmare.

Unnerving, tense and compelling, The Ruins is an important and thought-provoking novel that I highly recommend. I now intend to prioritise Ms. Wynne’s debut which is screaming at me from my shelves even louder after reading this.
Profile Image for Jackie.
892 reviews14 followers
July 4, 2022
I wasn’t going to write a review for this book but it seems that others hold the things against it that I found absolutely compelling. When an author is able to command my emotions as thoroughly as this one does, I know I have a masterpiece on my hands.

Yes, the adults in this book are absolutely horrifying, monstrous pieces of child abusing shit. But I was absolutely drawn in to the horror they presented, wanting to know how these children would be saved, and I cheered at the end.

Absolutely believable and redeeming, in my humble opinion.
Profile Image for Patty.
176 reviews29 followers
December 9, 2021
This engrossing, coming-of-age-story is set in the Ashby family Chateau located on the French Riviera over the course of the summer of 1985. The Ashby family epitomize the upper-class arrogance of travelling Brits abroad. Toby Ashby refers to the villagers as “peasants’, and explains, “The British abroad bring a great deal to their economy. They need us. They certainly need me.”

This book is a psychological suspense in the gothic vein filled with gin-soaked, pompous, entitled (and titled), spoiled adults who ignore and abuse the children; failing to protect them or show appropriate affection.

Ruby Ashby is the only child of barrister Toby, and multiple-committee’d, fragile, changeable mother, Rhoda. She is on the cusp of adolescence; experiencing her first crush and changing body. Her father is mostly absent, and her mother worries mostly about her appearance and manners; constantly commenting on what Ruby eats and how her clothes are getting tight. At first, Ruby comes across as jealous, judgmental, and condescending as she is informed that two girls will be spending their summer at the Chateau. However, it is only a matter of time before you realize that Ruby has never experienced closeness with anyone, and is unaware of how to interact with her peers. She is lonely and alone. Through Ruby’s eyes, we experience the inexplicable debauchery and lecherous actions of the adults as they drink, fight, and paw at Ruby and one of the girls.

The backdrop to Ruby’s story is a car accident caused by two of their guests. Toby Ashby’s experience as a barrister brings him in close contact with the officials and “peasants” of the village. This plus the residents’ behavior, start a visible rift—visible to all but the British adults—that will eventually affect their stay at the chateau.

As the summer heats up, so does the story, and possibly your blood pressure. The behavior of the adults towards the girls affected me. Two of the male characters take every opportunity to accost the girls: pulling them onto their laps, feeling them up, calling them names, and speaking in inuendo. At a dinner in St. Tropez, Harley (the worst of the two) states, “Oh the burdens of daughters, and you can’t even deflower them yourselves! Don’t you think fathers should be the ones to do the honors”.

As I read this book, I found myself wondering, how will this end? Is anyone going to break? And if so, whom will it be? I was caught up in worrying about Ruby, the inexplicable adults, and the growing suspense as it built up to a storm.

I would like to thank NetGalley and St. Martin’s Press for the opportunity to read and review this riveting book.



Profile Image for Anna  J.
1,409 reviews35 followers
February 14, 2022
Was excited when I won this book to read about France and be transported to the beautiful countryside and enjoy a thriller read.

Unfortunately this book was more about rich people who neglected their kids and were awful people. The kids were abused sexually and nobody cared. Was very hard to read and if I knew that this is what the book was mainly about I would have never picked it up.
Profile Image for Kerri Schneider.
35 reviews
May 27, 2023
A bittersweet coming-of-age story between three girls and the abusive adults who claim the title of "parents." I think the ending was entirely appropriate but not expected at all. The main character Ruby really began to grow on me over the story and I am left wanting to know more about everything that happened in the 20+ year gap between present day and past day stories.
Profile Image for Ranjini Shankar.
1,631 reviews86 followers
August 19, 2022
I really didn’t like this book at all. A lot of that has to do with the subject matter (the violation and abuse of teenage girls by older men they should have been able to trust) but there’s definitely a part due to just a lack of story and character development.

The story mostly follows Ruby who, after an end of year party hosted by her parents goes at their chateau in France goes wrong, is faced with a summer of having to host multiple families against her will. These families come with daughters of different ages and all of them come with really creepy dads who cross lines with the girls constantly.

The abuse was so belabored and never ending, it was horrible to get through this book. I definitely skimmed whole chunks hoping for some semblance of a mystery or story and was left disappointed.
Profile Image for Meg.
Author 2 books83 followers
January 21, 2022
How can a book with so many dark secrets be so boring? And yet, it was. Endless dinner table scenes where the characters refer to all their terrible deeds, past and planned, and then nothing happens.
Profile Image for Kayla Randolph.
211 reviews2 followers
December 14, 2021
I won this book as an ARC in a Goodreads giveaway. This book single-handedly had me wishing that books had trigger warnings.

As other reviewers mentioned, the back cover copy was misleading. "When unexpected guests arrive, simmering tension grows between the parents and their adolescent daughters." I anticipated the average throes of adolescence: learning to break the rules and becoming different people from their parents. I didn't expect to read about the physical and sexual abuse of the young girls and the inaction of their parents to protect them; the abuse goes unnoticed or worse unacknowledged. One of the girls is made to believe she is dirty and damaged goods, and the novel never resolves this and never sees her realize it isn't true. That, in particular, felt inappropriate to leave unaddressed. Wynne's writing made each scene feel graphic despite the fact the abuse was rarely graphic in the literal sense. It was incredibly disturbing. If I had known the true nature of the book, I would not have entered the giveaway.

On more minor notes, the line "Two guests from that fateful summer have returned to stake their claim" from the back cover is false because one of the individuals was not actually a guest that summer. As another reviewer mentioned, the time period of the '80s was unbelievable, feeling more like somewhere between the 1920s-1950s. While the reveal that the future narrator was Imogen and not Ruby was impressive, the future narrative didn't add any relief to the ending. There is no resolution and only more unexamined trauma.

While Wynne's descriptive diction is admirable, I am giving this three stars for being misleading in relation to disturbing and triggering material and leaving the events (and in some way the characters) unresolved.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Judy.
386 reviews13 followers
February 1, 2022
I am just not sure what to say about this book. I think hate is too strong a word, but I REALLY did not like it. The description posted on NetGalley does not really reflect the contents of this book. To say that the adults ignored the girls is an understatement. Although it was the mothers who ignored them, the fathers could not keep their hands off them. Each of the adult characters is horrible in their own special way and while the girls are certainly sympathetic creatures, they are not really likable either. And while the description tries to portray this as the widow revisiting the Château it is really only a tiny part of the book - and the resolution at the end is totally unsatisfactory. It is difficult to provide a meaningful review or feedback without adding spoilers. I think this book may find an audience but I anticipate most will be disappointed trying to reconcile their expectations with the actual story. There must be some way to advise readers of the disturbing aspects of this book. I received an ARC from the publisher through NetGalley and appreciate the opportunity to read this book.
Profile Image for Sissy.
55 reviews
March 4, 2022
This book needs to begin with an author's note to discuss the trigger warnings. I thought this book was going to be thriller, it was not. The plot is very thin, very few characters are likeable. Is it really believable that parents are so self absorbed to be blatantly ignorant to the sexual abuse happening right in front of them?
I'm giving this a 2.5 rounded up. The book is written well, but by no means is it an easy read due to the subject matter. Unfortunately I wouldn't recommend this book to others.

Thanks to St. Martin's Press for the Advance Copy.
Profile Image for Sherri H.
204 reviews4 followers
January 26, 2023
This was a big fat NOPE. I read the author's warning in the beginning about other girls who have been forced to sit in men's laps that didn't want to.. and I should have known what the author's intentions were.

I wanted to keep reading this book as I liked the character Ruby. She was disagreeable, ornery, and a real person. I liked that she wasn't glossed over and made perfect with slight flaws.

But, that was it. You can read all of the other low-star reviews as I feel the same way. I didn't like the strong theme of pedophilia, and the fact that most of the men in the story displayed proclivities towards 11-13 year old girls. An inappropriate comment here or there, sure, that might get her point across.. but, there's no way that all of the men in the story would be so brazen to groom and form relationships (consensual or not) with the young girls. Anyways, the overall creepiness just got to me. It wasn't entertainment. It was gross. I read other people's reviews, and I decided to stop reading because not only did it make me uncomfortable, but it made me upset. I also skimmed to the end, and I read the ending--and seriously, it was almost laughable in how ridiculous it was.

In summary, I highly do not recommend reading this book.
1,950 reviews51 followers
July 13, 2022
This is an awesome, creepy, gothic novel that may keep you reading long into the night! It centers on the Ashby family and 12-year-old Ruby who isn't happy when their villa in France is visited by several other families with two girls, Imogen and Annie; Ruby is forced to be civil and "entertain" them rather than sit quietly and read which she is used to. There are many strange happenings that we see--mainly through her eyes and most are cringe-worthy, especially because she doesn't quite know the truth until later. Alternating in time between 1985 and 2010, the novel examines the dark side of the arrogantly wealthy as they assume they are above the law as well as friendships and secrets that can destroy anything in their paths. This one will resonate with me for awhile!
Thanks to NetGalley for this ARC!
Profile Image for Diana N..
627 reviews33 followers
July 6, 2022
And the worst adult behavior award goes to.... This book was not my cup of tea and is mostly about dark and bad behavior than really about the Chateau.

I think this book was not for me since I really struggled to get through it. I felt like I got thrown in the middle at the beginning of the book and really lost interest since it was a bit over the top. I was hoping for that dark eerie feeling and it didn't really happen since I was so revolted by the characters.

The style of this book is mostly dialog which is fine when strong character voices are present, but this book just jumped around too much for that. I kept an open mind and finished it even though it was a bit much.

Thank you to the publisher and Netgalley for providing me a copy of this ARC for my honest review.
Profile Image for Jaime .
423 reviews30 followers
November 12, 2021
I thought this was a mystery, but while there is a hint of mystery, it’s more of a coming to age story. Ruby and Imogen are stuck with terrible parents and their friends at a chateau in France for the summer. It’s a compelling story that kept me turning pages. It’s also very stressful as it deals with childhood sexual abuse. I thought it was a good book!
Profile Image for Kaitlyn.
199 reviews11 followers
July 1, 2022
“Ruins” by Phoebe Wynne is a dark adult novel that takes readers into a world of manipulation, abuse, power imbalances, and wealth. It reads like a coming-of-age novel with sinister undertones of the gothic and dark academia, a perfect mix of innocence and wicked immorality. This emotionally intense tale will shock, intrigue, and disturb readers.

Ruby expected a normal paradisical summer vacation at her family’s house in France. Days by the sea, swimming in the pool, reading, the list of things she can do is endless. All of those plans change when unexpected visitors arrive at the Chateau, causing tension and chaos to descend on their seemingly pleasant home. One thing is clear to Ruby: if these guests remain in her home, then bad and unspeakable things will happen.

Years later, a widowed woman is looking to purchase the Chateau, but she has competition from someone who also has a close connection to the abandoned home. A battle of desperation, wits, and manipulation ensues as the two vie for the fate of the Chateau and its awful legacy.

After finishing this novel, readers will be left speechless. There is a lot to unpack and a lot of content warnings to be aware of, which says a lot about the nature of this book and its themes. While there are a lot of tough, uncomfortable moments to plunge through, Wynne expertly demonstrates the psychological and emotional impact these adults have on the children in the book and how quickly things can escalate in circumstances where there is no support or aid.

One unique aspect to highlight in this book is the inclusion of Greek myths, specifically popular myths in which the violence done against women by heroic figures went ignored by everyone except by the women spurned who rose up against the in vengeance. These powerful, often hated women become symbolic and influential figures to the girls in this story who find themselves in helpless, vulnerable positions. It’s a beautiful yet tragic comparison of a timeless abuse and how so much pain can cause someone to do unthinkable things to find freedom.

It did feel as though the plot was missing as a lot of the story centers around the disruption these visitors cause and the malicious, violent recklessness the adults have toward each other, the outsiders, and their children. Really, the plot of why these unwanted visitors even came to the Chateau gets buried under the deluge of hostility that occurs in this environment. Without a clear goal of where the story is headed can make it a bit of a slow read. This may be a difficult story for readers who are easily triggered by the content and who enjoy a clear, focused story that revolves around the plot rather than the psychological effects of an unhealthy environment.

“The Ruins” by Phoebe Wynne is a powerful, deceptive, and disturbing follow-up to her novel “Madam” that will no doubt send shockwaves through readers as they are consumed by Ruby’s tale and the events that took place during the summer. Readers who enjoy psychological thrillers must be on the lookout for Wynne’s newest novel on its expected publication date of July 05th, 2022.

Thank you to St. Martin’s Press for inviting me to read a free e-arc of this novel and for the opportunity to share my honest opinion in this review.
Profile Image for Sarah Vernall.
359 reviews10 followers
December 23, 2022
Every adult in this book is vile, entitled and appalling (with the possible exception of Liv), and every parent criminally neglectful. Nonetheless, it's as compelling as it is nasty (and it is DEEPLY nasty) with reasonably well-maintained suspense and very effective use of the child's narrative point of view - that sickening drip drip drip of the things the kids pick up on but don't quite understand or synthesize is always fun.
Profile Image for kvazimodla.
494 reviews29 followers
July 28, 2023
Strange book, and not easy to read. Everyone behaves abominably - or rather, all the adults behave like some sort of astonishingly unapologetic moral degenerates, and you have to wonder how those daughters even survive to grow up. No wonder aristocracy is dying out 🙄
A dark, dark story set against the lush backdrop of a drowsy summer in a chateau by the sea in the south of France.
Profile Image for Nita.
193 reviews4 followers
November 17, 2021
The setting of this book is lovely. While I did enjoy the authors writing, the child abuse is always hard for me to read about. It’s more about relationships than any mystery to me. A good read. I will look for this author again.
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