Arcadia Falls
by
Carol Goodman (Goodreads Author)
BONUS: This edition contains an Arcadia Falls discussion guide.
Financial straits and a desire for a fresh start take recently widowed Meg Rosenthal and her aloof teenage daughter, Sally, to Arcadia Falls, a tucked-away hamlet in upstate New York where Meg has accepted a teaching position at a boarding school. The creaky, neglected cottage they’ll be calling home feels like...more
Financial straits and a desire for a fresh start take recently widowed Meg Rosenthal and her aloof teenage daughter, Sally, to Arcadia Falls, a tucked-away hamlet in upstate New York where Meg has accepted a teaching position at a boarding school. The creaky, neglected cottage they’ll be calling home feels like...more
ebook, 352 pages
Published
March 9th 2010
by Ballantine Books
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**This was an advanced reader's copy I received through LibraryThing**
In the beginning, I really wanted to love this book. I really, really did. Toward the middle of the book, I was just hoping to like it. By the end, I was ready to bid it a not-so-fond farewell and move onto something else. The novel sounds as though it's tailor made for me: there's the strained mother/daughter relationship, the pastoral setting at a private school for the arts, dark and eerie fairytales, a judicious dollop of...more
In the beginning, I really wanted to love this book. I really, really did. Toward the middle of the book, I was just hoping to like it. By the end, I was ready to bid it a not-so-fond farewell and move onto something else. The novel sounds as though it's tailor made for me: there's the strained mother/daughter relationship, the pastoral setting at a private school for the arts, dark and eerie fairytales, a judicious dollop of...more
For the most part I want to say: Wow. Oh wow! This novel is so-o-O amazing and so-o-O beautiful I was immediately drawn in. Plus, it's multilayered, so it's like getting two books in one. Always a good deal, right. But that's for the most part. I'll get to the least part in a few...
meg just recently lost her husband and moves to a remote boarding school (Arcadia Falls) in upstate New York with her typical moody, morose, and artistic teenaged daughter, Sally. Meg is pretty excited about the job a...more
meg just recently lost her husband and moves to a remote boarding school (Arcadia Falls) in upstate New York with her typical moody, morose, and artistic teenaged daughter, Sally. Meg is pretty excited about the job a...more
For those that enjoy both historical fiction and mystery, this is a good choice. Tho most of it takes place in a contemporary town called Arcadia Falls, the modern day murder mystery parallels a murder that occured in the 1930s.
The modern day heroine is Meg. She is newly widowed and struggling both financially and emotionally and arrives at Arcadia's private art school with her sullen teenage daughter in tow where she proceeds to teach and unravel two murder mysteries. The modern day murder of...more
The modern day heroine is Meg. She is newly widowed and struggling both financially and emotionally and arrives at Arcadia's private art school with her sullen teenage daughter in tow where she proceeds to teach and unravel two murder mysteries. The modern day murder of...more
This book was choppy and uneven. Occasionally you would get drawn into certain scenes or characters, but other times the poor metaphors and overdone references to modern technology or pop culture made it feel heavy-handed. The climax scenes were ridiculously written, like a bad lifetime movie, but other plot-advancing scenes of exploration and observation could be fairly intriguing. I wish the depth and moodiness of some of these moments persisted, and that characters could become more real and...more
Originally published on my blog here in February 2012.
There is almost a subgenre of fiction set in remote New England boarding schools and colleges. Like thirties house parties in English stately homes, a staple setting for vintage crime fiction (as well as P.G. Wodehouse, of course), they provide a sealed community of privileged individuals which acts to intensify relationships, promote jealousy and passion, and makes more or less normal people behave in strange and bizarre fashions - as happen...more
There is almost a subgenre of fiction set in remote New England boarding schools and colleges. Like thirties house parties in English stately homes, a staple setting for vintage crime fiction (as well as P.G. Wodehouse, of course), they provide a sealed community of privileged individuals which acts to intensify relationships, promote jealousy and passion, and makes more or less normal people behave in strange and bizarre fashions - as happen...more
‘Arcadia Falls’ by Carol Goodman
Published by Piatkus, February 2011. ISBN: 978-0-7499-4242-7
Following her husband’s death Meg Rosenthal leaves the wealthy East Coast with her daughter Sally and joins the staff of a smart private school, Arcadia College to teach and pursue her academic fascination with folklore and nineteenth century literature.
Arcadia College, set in a valley against the side of a mountain and on three side’s thickly wooded countryside, was the home of Vera Beecher who establish...more
Published by Piatkus, February 2011. ISBN: 978-0-7499-4242-7
Following her husband’s death Meg Rosenthal leaves the wealthy East Coast with her daughter Sally and joins the staff of a smart private school, Arcadia College to teach and pursue her academic fascination with folklore and nineteenth century literature.
Arcadia College, set in a valley against the side of a mountain and on three side’s thickly wooded countryside, was the home of Vera Beecher who establish...more
Arcadia Falls is a novel about the relationships of women to each other and to art. It starts out following Meg Rosenthal, a recently widowed woman who has been awarded a teaching position at The Arcadia School, a private high school for the arts in rural New York. Meg is driving to the village of Arcadia with her teenage daughter, Sally. The plan is for Sally to attend the school where Meg will be teaching.
Meg is driving an eleven-year-old Jaguar that sums up her situation in life. The car belo...more
Meg is driving an eleven-year-old Jaguar that sums up her situation in life. The car belo...more
Jul 09, 2011
melissa1lbr
rated it
3 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
arcs,
review-copy
Things I Liked:
The atmosphere of the book was perfect. It was creepy and fairy tale-esque and kept reminding me of how gorgeous and mysterious nature can be. I loved the aspects of the school's history that related to fairy tales and the mysterious veil that was spread across the whole place. The story was pretty intriguing as well, near the end. But what I think carries this book is the setting and the descriptions of the time, the location, etc, that make you feel like you are a part of this f...more
The atmosphere of the book was perfect. It was creepy and fairy tale-esque and kept reminding me of how gorgeous and mysterious nature can be. I loved the aspects of the school's history that related to fairy tales and the mysterious veil that was spread across the whole place. The story was pretty intriguing as well, near the end. But what I think carries this book is the setting and the descriptions of the time, the location, etc, that make you feel like you are a part of this f...more
I was eager to begin this book because I love the elements contained in this type of fiction: literary mystery in the vein of A. S. Byatt, likable main characters, interesting settings, etc. So I went into it with no expectations but to enjoy myself. I judge a book by the first few pages. If those pages suck me into the story right away, I keep reading. If they do not, I may go for a few more pages, but if I'm not drawn in, I stop reading and put it aside. I liked the premise enough to keep read...more
Meg Rosenthal needs a fresh start after the death of her husband. She gave up her career as an artist when her daughter Sally was born, but when she is left with virtually nothing except for a barely functional car, she finds a job teaching folklore and English at a small boarding school for young artists in upstate New York. Sally, now a teenager and a promising artist herself, is admitted to the Arcadia School where her mother will work. Meg hopes that this new career will not only allow her t...more
Normally I don't enjoy literary works that tells a story within a story but Carol Goodman spins a brilliant tale of how the past and present is intertwined in this atmospheric mystery.
Meg Rosenthal has to find a way to support herself and her daughter Sally after her husband dies suddenly of a heart attack, leaving behind a mountain of debt.She sells off her New York house and accepts a teaching job - the only one she could get with her qualifications - in Arcadia Falls , a place where she hope...more
Meg Rosenthal has to find a way to support herself and her daughter Sally after her husband dies suddenly of a heart attack, leaving behind a mountain of debt.She sells off her New York house and accepts a teaching job - the only one she could get with her qualifications - in Arcadia Falls , a place where she hope...more
Recently widowed Meg takes a teaching position at the Arcadia Falls art colony in hopes of gaining financial stability, restoring her relationship with her teenage daughter, Claire, and completing her research on the authors of a lost changeling girl fairytale. This fairytale and its lessons weave their truths throughout Meg and Claire's Arcadia Falls experience.[return][return]Carol Goodman's voice lures you into a seductive world of fairy tales and pagan rituals, mystery and death. She weaves...more
Carol Goodman is known for her gothic, fictional portraits of academia. Her latest release, Arcadia Falls, is no exception. The novel begins as Meg Rosenthal and her daughter Sally travel from their over-sized, suburban home in Great Neck, New York, to the small upstate town of Arcadia. Meg lost her husband Jude last year, and neither she nor Sally has yet dealt with their grief. The two move so that Meg can take a teaching job at a private fine arts boarding school just outside of town called A...more
After the death of her husband, Meg Rosenthal and her daughter Sally are forced to start over in Arcadia Falls, a small town in upstate New York. Meg takes a job as an English teacher at the local boarding school, a location that provides a double benefit: free housing and access to primary source material for her Ph.D. dissertation on the literary and artistic works of the school's founders.
Arcadia Falls turns out to be a story-within-a-story. When Meg discovers a long-lost journal, she begins...more
Arcadia Falls turns out to be a story-within-a-story. When Meg discovers a long-lost journal, she begins...more
I loved Goodman's first four books, especially Lake of Dead Languages. But her fifth and sixth efforts, The Sonnet Lover and The Night Villa, were too formulaic, and the writer seemed to be drifting on autopilot, rehashing the same old characters and dusting off the same tired plot devices. However, with Arcadia Falls, I think Goodman is getting back on the right track.
Although the main character, Meg, is another middle-aged academic,the writer has taken more care to fill out her dimensions as...more
Although the main character, Meg, is another middle-aged academic,the writer has taken more care to fill out her dimensions as...more
May 31, 2010
Kathleen Hagen
added it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
2010-audio-books,
2010-mysteries
Arcadia Falls, by Carol Goodman, b-plus, narrated by Jen Taylor, produced by BBC Audio Books-America, downloaded from audible.com.
Meg Rosenthal is in debt after her husband’s unexpected death. He had not left them money, even though he had been a successful businessman. So Meg moves herself and her teenage daughter, Sally, to Arcadia Falls, a town with a women’s art college, and a town with a history of being interested in witchcraft and pagan rituals. Meg was writing her thesis on the founders...more
Meg Rosenthal is in debt after her husband’s unexpected death. He had not left them money, even though he had been a successful businessman. So Meg moves herself and her teenage daughter, Sally, to Arcadia Falls, a town with a women’s art college, and a town with a history of being interested in witchcraft and pagan rituals. Meg was writing her thesis on the founders...more
I thought this book would be right up my alley: an old cottage in the woods, fairy tales and folklore, a mystery from the past and a lost journal, a little romance, art and artists from the Arts and Crafts period -- all in the hands of a literary and intelligent writer. I have read other books by Carol Goodman and have found her writing to be lyrical and her material multi-layered. I have to confess to being disappointed with this one, however, though it certainly kept me reading. I was irritate...more
I received a copy of the book Arcadia Falls by the author Carol Goodman, just a few short days ago. I had read Ms. Goodman's first novel, The Sea of Dead Languages, and enjoyed that, so I was anxious to dive into this story.
Arcadia Falls takes place in a mountain refuge where a historic artist commune had been located. This commune had been a space for women, primarily, to nurture their talents. Later the commune became a girls' school that was shrouded in intrigue and tragedy.
The recently widow...more
Arcadia Falls takes place in a mountain refuge where a historic artist commune had been located. This commune had been a space for women, primarily, to nurture their talents. Later the commune became a girls' school that was shrouded in intrigue and tragedy.
The recently widow...more
I'd never read a Carol Goodman book before so I wasn't sure what to expect starting this book. I have to say that I really enjoyed it! Meg is a totally believable mom with a teenage daughter that reminds me a lot of my daughter. They move to an artsy private boarding school where Meg takes a job teaching at the school loacated in a small rural community in Upstate New York that reminds me of the town I live in.
Meg is familiar with the town because of an old fairy tale called The Changeling Girl...more
Meg is familiar with the town because of an old fairy tale called The Changeling Girl...more
When Meg Rosenthal gets a job offer from a private boarding school in Upper New York, she thinks this will be the new start she's looking for. Recently widowed, and with her sixteen year old daughter in tow, Meg makes the move to Arcadia, the art school she's been hired at.
Right from the start, it's apparent that things are done a bit differently at Arcadia. Students--and faculty--celebrate pagan rituals such as Samhain and summer solstice. As Meg (and her daughter) become more emeshed with the...more
Right from the start, it's apparent that things are done a bit differently at Arcadia. Students--and faculty--celebrate pagan rituals such as Samhain and summer solstice. As Meg (and her daughter) become more emeshed with the...more
I wanted to like this book better than I did. Described as an "enthralling work of literary fiction that follows a mother and daughter as they uncover the sinister secrets of an isolated boarding school", I expected a gripping plot with rich, descriptive prose. Instead I was frustrated by a plodding, unbelievable story line. It particularly bothered me that the untimely death of a student at the school barely evoked an emotional response from the characters, let alone the parents of the student...more
AH, this book was so frustrating! It really seemed like I had stumbled across my perfect book - a literature and folklore professor obsessed with fairy tales stumbles into a Gothic tale of an artists' colony/school filled with secrets - perfect!! Even the title drew me in, as it shares an allusion with my favorite play. I expected a fun, quick read with a story that seemed overflowing with my very favorite things.
Those hopes were, for the most part, almost entirely met. The key word is almost....more
Those hopes were, for the most part, almost entirely met. The key word is almost....more
Book #43 of 2011
It's taken me over a year to get through this book. Which by that I really mean that I've had this book for a year and couldn't really get into it when I first picked it up. But I always enjoy Carol Goodman's books and I ended up enjoying this one as well. In a way it was a sad story - there were a lot of themes of women's choices (esp. with regards to the arts, because that was this story, but I think it could just as easily be about anything) - Do they give up their dreams for...more
It's taken me over a year to get through this book. Which by that I really mean that I've had this book for a year and couldn't really get into it when I first picked it up. But I always enjoy Carol Goodman's books and I ended up enjoying this one as well. In a way it was a sad story - there were a lot of themes of women's choices (esp. with regards to the arts, because that was this story, but I think it could just as easily be about anything) - Do they give up their dreams for...more
Extremely well written ... and extremely silly. It's one of those mystery novels that you get to the end to and just start rolling your eyes.
Recently widowed and nearly destitute Meg Rosenthal takes her 16 year old daughter Sally with her to a private art school in Arcadia Falls to accept a teaching position. One of the schools two founders, Lily, died mysteriously fifty years before. On the night Meg arrives, a student dies after falling off a cliff. (Someone is forever falling off this cliff....more
Recently widowed and nearly destitute Meg Rosenthal takes her 16 year old daughter Sally with her to a private art school in Arcadia Falls to accept a teaching position. One of the schools two founders, Lily, died mysteriously fifty years before. On the night Meg arrives, a student dies after falling off a cliff. (Someone is forever falling off this cliff....more
It's impossible not to compare this book to Carol Goodman's earlier novel 'The Lake of Dead Languages' (still LOVE that title). Both involve women who move to a desolate school to teach after their marriage ends (one way or another) toting their daughters behind. Both involve secrets kept in the very setting of the school in Upstate New York. While the lake in 'The Lake of Dead Languages' obviously takes center stage, the woods and a clove play a similar role in Arcadia Falls. Both involve pagan...more
Hmmm...loved it. Totally engrossing, rich images, just enough mystery and dysfunction to make this book very special. Picture in your mind a lovely artist retreat in the hills of New England that has been turned into a school. Now focus on the idea that the school is run by an unusual dean with a mysterious past. The main character of this book has been recently widowed and is left virtually penniless. Meg Rosenthal and her daughter Sally are forced to sell nearly all that they own in order to p...more
Hmm...there are a lot of things I could say about this book. For all intensive purposes, it was a good book, one that I was able to make through without much difficulty in terms of lacking plot-lines or the prose of which the author writes. However, there were a few issues I had with the book, but as well as some decent highlights.
One of the things that gets me, is Meg, the ever despondent and curious teacher constantly references in earlier chapters that she assumes this kid doesn't do that, or...more
One of the things that gets me, is Meg, the ever despondent and curious teacher constantly references in earlier chapters that she assumes this kid doesn't do that, or...more
Arcadia Falls is a small town in rural New York. It's home to an boarding school for students interested in the arts. When her husband dies suddenly leaving her deeply in debt, Meg takes a job teaching there, bringing her teenage daughter. Although they find a supportive environment for their talents, they also find a place steeped in history, secrets, and mystery.
Goodman sucks the reader into this world. There are missing journals, hints of witchcraft, rumors of ghosts, and a student who myst...more
Goodman sucks the reader into this world. There are missing journals, hints of witchcraft, rumors of ghosts, and a student who myst...more
I got this book free as a review copy and was intrigued by the sentence on the front claiming it was “Miss Jean Brodie meets Donna Tartt”. Now, I loved The Secret History by Donna Tartt, so thought that was a good omen.
I can see why the comparison was made, but don’t think that this is a heavy-going book (which I personally think that The Secret History is – but in a good way!).
Meg Rosenthal is a recently widowed, recently qualified teacher and due to the financial mess her husband’s death has l...more
I can see why the comparison was made, but don’t think that this is a heavy-going book (which I personally think that The Secret History is – but in a good way!).
Meg Rosenthal is a recently widowed, recently qualified teacher and due to the financial mess her husband’s death has l...more
I found this book to be a little slow when I first started reading it, but within a few chapters it started to take a hold of me. The more I read the more gripped I got, by the last third I found it hard to tear myself away from it.
The plot centres around Meg, a grieving widow who takes a job at Arcadia Falls because the death of her husband has left her and her daughter Sally finding it hard to make ends meet. It has the added bonus of being a school with a strong artistic heritage, Sally is a...more
The plot centres around Meg, a grieving widow who takes a job at Arcadia Falls because the death of her husband has left her and her daughter Sally finding it hard to make ends meet. It has the added bonus of being a school with a strong artistic heritage, Sally is a...more
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| Bound Together: Arcadia Falls discussion | 26 | 69 | Jun 27, 2012 07:24pm |
Carol Goodman is the author of The Lake of Dead Languages. Her work has appeared in such journals as The Greensboro Review, Literal Latt, The Midwest Quarterly, and Other Voices. After graduation from Vassar College, where she majored in Latin, she taught Latin for several years in Austin, Texas. She then received an M.F.A. in fiction from the New School University. Goodman currently teaches writi...more
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