Cover Image: The Castle School (for Troubled Girls)

The Castle School (for Troubled Girls)

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

“You scared me. I’d never seen that much blood.”
“People get too freaked out by blood. What’s the big deal? We all have it.”
“Yeah, but most of us try to keep as much of it as possible inside of us.”

Alyssa Sheinmel has a very niche style. I first encountered it in A Danger to Herself and Others, and I saw it once again with The Castle School (for Troubled Girls). She delves deeply into the mind of, you guessed it, troubled girls.
Most of the time, when you read a book about a young woman being labelled as difficult and being institutionalized, you expect her to be falsely accused. You expect that society has labelled her as crazy simply because she didn’t fit the mold. And history would agree; for example, the Salem Witch Trials. This idea of a young woman desperately fighting the system is thrilling and vindictive. Yet, Alyssa Sheinmel never takes this easy route. She shows us real girls with real mental illnesses, and the struggles that they go through. Her stories show us that accepting your problems is the first step to solving them. She builds trust in the system, rather than feeding the idea of crazy scientists and evil doctors. There is not big reveal, or dramatic plot twist. Her stories are real and they aren’t sensationalized, which is why they can feel a bit anticlimactic at first. But mental illness isn’t something that can be conquered in a day, or even a year. It’s a long, slow, often bitter process.
I did, however, find this more satisfying than A Danger to Herself and Others, possibly because Moyra wasn't locked up in a cell. Moyra isn't kept in solitary confinement; she's at a posh boarding school in a castle where she's served delicious food and has ample leisure time. The ensemble cast of The Castle School also added to its charm, and the way that Alyssa Sheinmel explained each of their illnesses was very insightful. Their “disorders” were much harder to brush off as “bad decisions” once we got a look into their mindset.
Overall, The Castle School serves us a protagonist who barges in with conspiracy theories and indignation, only to emerge as a wiser and kinder soul on the path to recovery. Maybe it’s presumptuous, but I think the readers of the book might have a similar journey.

Was this review helpful?

Moira is a troubled young girl that is sent to boarding school. There she finds even more trouble when she discovers the boys school nearby. However, that’s not the only trouble she finds. The school is full of mystery and she sets out to find the truth. This is a slow starter, but it is an overall very good read. It’s full of suspense and mystery. It draws the reader in and makes you want to know what happened. I really enjoyed this book and would recommend it to any fan of YA thrillers!

Was this review helpful?

I loved this book. The characters and their emotions felt so real and raw. I don't cry at many books, but the grieving process that this book describes was very similar to how I've felt losing my dad and I found myself overcome with emotion many times on our main character's journey. This book is a stand out book for me this year and probably for years to come. I would recommend this.

Was this review helpful?

This book is everything I wanted right now and took my mind away to the world of this book . The story is really strong and kept me page turning and I just didn’t want to put it down . Just a really solid read great work Alyssa Sheinmel !

Was this review helpful?

I think the book is good and from the middle on its pretty interesting. The only problem that I have is that it takes a bit for it to get started at the beginning.

Was this review helpful?

I thought the Castle School was well written and I love the idea of a school for troubled girls. Moira is sent to a school after she has continually acted out after the death of her best friend. She is sent to a school for troubled girls. Moira's story was compelling and many people will relate to it. The story was interspersed with stories of how the other girls showed up at the school which was also fun to read.

My issue was I felt the book wasn't exactly as it was presented to be. I almost felt like I was in store for a YA version of girl interrupted but it was more a somber story of how to heal from mental health issues than a psychological thrill I thought I was about to embark on.

It was by no means something I wouldn't recommend to people, it just wasn't what I thought it would be.

Was this review helpful?

Disclaimer: I got this in an exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own. This book is perfect for fans of A Good Girl's Guide to Murder and The Gallagher Academy. I thought it was very compelling and the story instantly draws you in!

Was this review helpful?

A little meh. Plot line were good but the story just wasn’t there. Overall a good read, but a little disappointing. Main character was annoying, I didn’t like the style this book was written in, I find it hard to stay focused. Also I felt like the spooky vibe was missing but that could just be me

Was this review helpful?

I was really excited for the premise of this book, although disappointed in the execution. I found the initial chapters really lackluster and quite frankly, I found the main character annoying, However, I really liked how mental health and grief were discussed in this book. In addition, I think I would've liked it more if there was more of a mystery element like the plot suggests, or if it was simply marked as a "YA Contemporary"

Was this review helpful?

I have a love/hate relationship with this one.
I originally got it because it seemed like a spooky book. I thought maybe the castle was haunted, or something sinister was going on. That’s not the case at all.

The book is a really nice display of touching grief, and what it does to others and how people deal with that. I liked the random chapters through the book that told how the girls were at the school in the first place, and what was “wrong” with them.

The main character got kind of annoying real fast. Maybe it was the grief, or maybe she was just annoying, but she had this constant need to make it seem like everyone was out for her. She wanted no friends, or really to do anything. She didn’t even have many personality traits outside of being obsessed with her best friend from home, and knowing useless trivia

The writing was good, and i enjoyed the story (trying to figure out grief) but i feel like it was something completely different then i expected

Was this review helpful?

I wasn't 100% on board with some of the first person 'troubled girl' chapters, but I did find most of them to be at least 70% right (not that I'm an expert on these things, but it's my review and I say what I want). Overall, the main character was a little bit oblivious,a fact which was mitigated by a couple of her cohorts being downright interesting.

Was this review helpful?

For some odd reason I thought this book was going to have a lot of action. I’m not sure why I thought that but I was completely wrong. This book isn’t the light reading I thought it was going to be. This book has a lot of depth and emotion and it’s one that tackles hard mental issues, but it’s done in away that doesn’t trivialize it. I laughed and my heart broke for the characters. Alyssa Sheinmel does an amazing job of making you feel like all the characters are the main ones. I couldn’t even tell you my favorite character because I was so invested in all of them. It’s just an amazing story overall.

Was this review helpful?

Listen as a girl who could never find her name on a novelty keychain I am always going to be sucked into anything where one of the main characters has my exact name. I really enjoyed this one. I thought the author did an outstanding job In her approach of handling multiple mental illnesses. This is emotional, poignant, layered read that was also thought provoking, well written book with memorable characters. The ending had me in tears.

Was this review helpful?

Definitely a tearjerker. Reminds me of the movie My Girl Two. Addresses a lot of teen issues in a more positive light than normal.

Was this review helpful?

A YA novel about grief and other issues that can block life from moving forward. The topics are handled in an honest and realistic way, and though dark, the book is overall optimistic. I was pleasantly surprised by how much i connected with the characters and the story.

Was this review helpful?

(Spoiler free review)

Realistic yet an enthralling read.

The title does really give away a little bit of fairy tale ambience whereby the school is structured like a castle hence the glorious description of turrets and being stranded in the middle of the woods say it all. To put it more peculiar, this school is specifically built for troubled girls whose parents are finally at the end of their wits in curing their children. Well fret not, the mission of the Castle School is to ensure that every troubled girl has a second chance to find the better versions of themselves and here’s the odd, only 12 girls are admitted into the school.

We follow Moira, one of the troubled girls, who finds herself dreading at the thought of being sent and staying in a sullen atmosphere with strict rules that she must abide by. No Wi-Fi, no proper library, and they freaking have lights-out time. Sounds like a prison to her, not a castle. She wouldn’t be in this predicament if her best friend, Nathan, hadn’t succumbed to cancer. We get to see her life slowly falling apart after that.
Each problem faced by the girls is really intense and well-delivered by the author. The author managed to take us on a multifaceted view and psychological approach towards the backstory of how the girls first acquiring their problems, then struggling, fighting and surviving through them. Some problems are unable to stay still (ADHD), eating disorder (anorexia), refuse to talk (selective mutism), can’t resist the urge to pull out their hair (Trichotillomania), depression, flight risks, an OCD person, a kleptomaniac and others.

Paradoxically, with these brooding problems going on, these girls who think they are misfits to society slowly finding themselves intertwining a special friendship amongst them. Expect humour and warm fuzzy feeling coming your way. The excitement doesn’t end here though. Unbeknownst to Moira, she’s discovered another hidden castle but all boys. What has befuddled her is that why the boys are treated in a better and lively environment compared to the one she and the other girls living in? The mystery about having the two castles will be unveiled and the unexpected presence comes tumbling into Moira’s life making her all feverish will soon be declared. Such a poignant yet rivetingly beautiful story that makes you delve into friendship, family, and lastly the real struggles that'll make your knees wobble at the thought of them.

Was this review helpful?

Moira is sent to The Castle School for Girls after a tumultuous period with her parents, where everything in her life is going wrong after her best friend Nathan dies.

The Castle School accepts only 12 girls and throughout the novel, we follow not only Moira’s journey, but each of the other residents as well.

I found this novel to be a well written path on recovery (in many different forms - loss, anorexia, self-harm, abandonment) and mental illness. The author does a fantastic job of producing a YA novel that isn’t in your face about the array of issues surrounding teens, and how you can forage friendships in the darkest of your own days.

Was this review helpful?

THIS BOOK CONTAINS MAJOR TRIGGERS

I will list these triggers at the end of the review, as I try to do, but be aware that I will be discussing mental illnesses, eating disorders, addictions, and other potentially triggering topics. I will avoid details where possible, but the book is set in a school for “troubled girls”, so it may not be possible to avoid completely.

I have read one other book by this author (that I am aware of) - A Danger To Herself and Others - and boy, was that a ride. While attempting not to give away spoilers, I picked up on something relatively early on in that book, which was later confirmed, but it in NO WAY detracted from the overall beautiful, heart-wrenching majesty of the story. So once I knew that The Castle School was by the same author (which, admittedly, was AFTER I started reading it), I knew I was in for a time.

As I start writing this, I’m only about halfway through. I was past the point of no return on my way to work this morning when I realised I had forgotten my Kindle… but it’s ok. I have the Kindle app on my phone (and the NetGalley one as well come to think of it), so I will be able to read on my lunch break. Yay!

The first note I wrote while reading (this is still something that is new to me; taking notes as I read. Maybe if I had done that when I was studying…. NO! No what ifs). It wasn’t something I thought I would like - as a kid (and adult) I tend(ed) to inhale books, not putting them down for dinner let alone to write notes! (The skills I have developed of holding the book and being able to turn pages all with my non-dominant hand serve me well both eating and note-taking!) That said, I have started to enjoy it. It’s nice to have a scribble of thoughts of things I can look back on and solidify; a list I can use as a springboard when it comes to talking about the book to others. No-one else needs to see my scribble, 90% of the time it makes a little sense to me, but not always!

Okay, we’ll try that again!

The first note I wrote while reading this book was “this book has so much trivia, I love it!” Our main character has a habit of filling silences with trivia. ***** insert trivia*****

The premise is (so far), simple. Our main character, Moria, has been sent away to the Castle School. Following the death of her best friend, her parents are at their wits end, and decide she needs more help than they can give.

Moira is escorted to The Castle School by two bulky men - bodyguards, tasked with making sure she doesn’t run away - and lands in a place which is far different than she imagined. The Castle - a literal castle - somewhere (maybe) in Maine, is cold, damp, and dark. Her driver - son of the headmaster/doctor/owner of the school - tells her that it is after lights out, and that she needs to go to bed. Moira soon discovers that the school has an odd timetable - they don’t have a TIMEtable. The girls (there are 12) are woken, fed, ‘taught’, therapied, exercised and returned to bed without knowing what the time is, what the day is, or even where they are.

The other 12 girls have a mix of conditions. We get to know each girl briefly, and we get a little more information about them in between chapters, with a section of each girl and how/why she ended up at the school.

I won’t say much more, it’s too hard to rave without giving away important parts. Just know it is beautiful, and potentially triggering at the same time. I will note here that if you don’t like books which are ‘slice of life’ or you only read books which are filled with adventure, this is not that. I won’t say you won’t enjoy it, or should avoid it, because it IS SO GOOD.

Content Warnings: discussions of addiction, drugs, self hard (cutting mostly), OCD, assault, trichotillomania, death, dying, mental health, therapy, family issues, selective mutism, eating disorders, scars, inpatient. There are probably more, but just be aware going in that the author doesn’t hold back.

Overall Rating: FIVE STARS

Was this review helpful?

The cover and blurb of this book tricked me. I went into this thinking it was a mystery (the blurb SAYS it's a mystery...) and... there was no mystery! I would have DNF'ed it from 25% if I would have known that there wasn't an actual mystery. So disappointed. I think I would have liked it better if I would have gone into it knowing that it wasn't a mystery and just a contemporary YA novel.

Was this review helpful?

When Moira Dreyfuss's parents send her away to The Castle School (for troubled girls) she knows there is no way to change their minds. Her mother has given up on her and her father agrees with whatever her mother says. The Castle school houses 11 other girls who all have different issues. Life in the castle gets interesting when the lock on Moria's window breaks and she and her roommate Eleanore venture out into the woods. The two girls are shocked to find an exact replica of their castle but this one is housed with 12 teenage boys. But as Moria works through her pain she realizes the school is exactly what she needs to deal with the death of her best friend.

Was this review helpful?