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The Home for Wayward Girls

A Novel

Audiobook
6 of 6 copies available
6 of 6 copies available

Growing up in the 1990s, a young girl escapes her abusive parents–and the "ranch" they ran for "bad" girls—and becomes an advocate for teen runaways in this harrowing and heartfelt novel for fans of Joanna Goodman and Lisa Wingate.

While other adolescent girls are listening to grunge rock or swooning over boy bands and movie stars, Loretta knows little of life beyond the Home for Wayward Girls, the secluded ranch where her parents run a program designed to "correct" teen girls' "bad behavior." Some new residents arrive with their moms and dads, while other are accompanied by transporters—people paid to forcibly deliver these "problem" teens—girls caught swearing, smoking, drinking, or kissing. Many are failed runaways desperate to leave their controlling and sometimes brutal homes. Few have any idea of the suffering that lies ahead.

Loretta witnesses firsthand how the adults use abusive discipline to crush these young women's spirits and break their wills. She understands these girls' pain and shares it. Since childhood she's been afraid of her father, and avoids him by spending time with the residents, secretly teaching them the survival skills they'll need in case they manage to escape. Until the day a horrifying act of violence forces her to make her own terrible choice. Terrified and with no other option, Loretta flees the ranch and hitchhikes across the country, ending up in New York. Eventually finding safety and a sympathetic community, Loretta dedicates herself to working with lost, vulnerable, and defenseless teens, determined to prevent the same thing from happening to other girls like her.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 27, 2023
      Bradley debuts with a stirring account of a teenage girl’s escape from her abusive foster parents and her attempt to build a new life as an adult. The nonlinear narrative shuffles between the foster home, somewhere out West on a ranch in the mid-1990s, to present-day New York City. After Loretta’s foster father, William, assaults her one morning before she leaves for school, Loretta, almost 18 and fearing for her life, conspires with her foster sister Elsie, 16, to flee. She begins memorizing maps and atlases, and the two girls make their break with help from Loretta’s teacher. Bradley then skips forward to New York City, where Loretta is a social worker and struggles with anxiety, and her nice-guy husband marvels at how differently she turned out from her parents. In flashbacks, Loretta mentors her younger foster sisters (including Elsie), showing them how to navigate the house rules. Though the timeline can be tough to follow, Bradley shines in her portrayal of Loretta working up to her moment of escape, and in showing how Loretta walks on eggshells before finally standing up for herself. It’s a bit bumpy, but heartfelt nonetheless.

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  • English

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