If There Be Thorns
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This article consists almost entirely of a plot summary. It should be expanded to provide more balanced coverage that includes real-world context. (July 2011) |
Paperback edition
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Author | V. C. Andrews |
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Country | United States |
Language | English |
Series | Dollanganger series |
Genre | Gothic horror Family saga |
Publisher | Simon & Schuster |
Publication date
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1981 |
Media type | |
Pages | 384 |
ISBN | 0-671-72945-4 (1990 reissues) |
OCLC | 23719996 |
Preceded by | Petals on the Wind (1980) |
Followed by | Seeds of Yesterday (1984) |
If There Be Thorns is a novel by Virginia Andrews which was published in 1981. It is the third book in the Dollanganger series. The story takes place in the year 1982. There was a Lifetime movie of the same name that premiered on April 5, 2015 (Easter).
Plot summary
The book is narrated by two half-brothers,
Jory and Bart Sheffield. Jory is a handsome, talented fourteen-year-old
boy who wants to follow his mother Cathy in her career in the ballet,
while nine-year old Bart, who is plain and clumsy, feels inferior to
his brother. By now, siblings Cathy and Chris live together as husband
and wife. To hide their history, they tell the boys and other people
they know that Chris was Paul's younger brother. Cathy and Chris have a
passionate and very loving relationship, described by Jory who has
accidentally witnessed encounters between them. The more they fight, the
more they make up with affection. Cathy is a loving mother to her sons,
but shows some favoritism towards Jory. Unable to have more children,
Cathy secretly adopts Cindy, the two-year-old daughter of one her former
dance students, who was killed in an accident, because she longs to
have a girl, as well as child that is hers and Christopher's. Initially
against it, Chris comes to accept the child, and Jory does as well, but
Bart is very upset and resentful of Cindy. Lonely from all the attention
Jory and Cindy are receiving, Bart befriends an elderly neighbor that
moved in next door, who invites him over for cookies and ice cream
and encourages him to call her "Grandmother." Jory eventually goes next
door as well to see who Bart keeps visiting, and the old lady tried to
tell him that she is actually his grandmother. Jory initially doesn't
believe her, and avoids her at all costs. The old woman and Bart, on the
other hand, soon develop an affectionate friendship, and the woman does
her best to give Bart whatever he wants, provided that Bart promises to
keep her gifts—and their relationship—a secret from his mother.
Her butler, John Amos, also seems to befriend Bart, but soon John
Amos begins to fill Bart's mind with stories about the sinful nature of
women. John Amos reveals that the old woman is truly Bart's grandmother,
Corrine Foxworth. He also gives Bart a diary
belonging to Bart's biological great-grandfather, Malcolm Foxworth,
claiming that this journal will help Bart become as powerful and
successful as that man. Bart is enveloped by the diary and begins to
pretend that he is his great-grandfather, who hated women and was
obsessed with their degradation. Bart becomes destructive and violent
towards his parents and siblings; he kicks Jory in the stomach and cuts
off Cindy's hair, and once even tries to drown Cindy in her baby pool.
Bart's family notices the change in the boy, but only Jory suspects that
the changes are due to the mysterious woman next door. At the same
time, Jory becomes suspicious of his parents' relationship. Although
amazed by their love, which he describes as intense and heartful, he
notices that they resemble each other and wonders why his mother would
marry Paul, who was much older, before Chris.
After Bart becomes ill and nearly dies, Jory finally tells Chris
about his suspicions about the lady next door. They go to confront her,
but Chris discovers that the woman is his mother, who pleads with him to
love and forgive her. Chris is indifferent to her pleas and orders her
to stay away from him, Cathy, and the children, especially Bart.
However, he decides not to tell Cathy about any of this. At the same
time, Cathy is injured in a ballet accident and is told that she will
never dance again. From her wheelchair, she begins to write out the story of her life.
Bart filches his mother's manuscript pages and is enraged to learn the
truth about his parents: Cathy and Chris are brother and sister, and his
"grandmother" locked them in an attic
for years, feeding them poison to gain an inheritance. The news causes
Bart to cling to the only person who has not yet lied to him: John Amos.
Bart proudly calls his parents sinners and "devil's spawns". Jory finds
out the truth when his paternal grandmother visits and confronts Cathy
about her relationship with "her brother Christopher". Jory is shocked
and disgusted, but soon forgives them after he learns of their tragic
past.
Cathy finally learns about the woman next door when Bart accidentally
says that the woman gives him anything he wants, and she goes to
confront the woman. The old woman tries to hide her identity, but Cathy
recognizes her voice. Corrine admits that she is indeed Cathy's mother.
She expresses remorse for her crimes against Cathy, Chris and the twins,
and begs Cathy to forgive and love her again. Cathy is enraged and
attacks her. Before she can storm out, John Amos knocks Cathy and
Corrine unconscious. Working on John Amos' orders, Bart, who now
believes he is a vessel for his great-grandfather's vengeful spirit, helps to lock Cathy and her mother into the cellar,
where John Amos plans to starve them to death. In the course of this,
Bart realizes how much he loves his mother and grandmother, despite
their sins, and he tells Chris where the women are. But before they can
be reached, the house next door catches fire. Bart goes in and unlocks
the cellar door. Corrine orders Bart outside, and Corrine goes back into
the cellar and saves Cathy, but Corrine's clothes catch fire as soon as
she gets outside. Chris runs to her and helps put out the flames, but
her heart gives out and she dies. John Amos dies in the house as well.
The epilogue, resumed with Cathy as narrator, describes Cathy's emotional forgiveness of her mother at the woman's funeral.
Cathy and Chris, for the sake of their three children, realize that
they must never allow their secret relationship to be revealed. Bart
seems to have recovered from the worst of his madness, but still dwells
on the power wielded by his great-grandfather, whose millions he now
stands to inherit.
Adaptation
Main article: If There Be Thorns (film)
If There Be Thorns will be adapted as an original Lifetime film set for April 2015. The sequel, Seeds of Yesterday
has also been adapted for a television film, and will be released the
same year as part of a special two-night event concluding the series.
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