The St. Ambrose School for Girls

The St. Ambrose School for Girls

by Jessica Ward

Narrated by Gail Shalan

Unabridged — 11 hours, 47 minutes

The St. Ambrose School for Girls

The St. Ambrose School for Girls

by Jessica Ward

Narrated by Gail Shalan

Unabridged — 11 hours, 47 minutes

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Overview

The newest student at the elite St. Ambrose School for Girls must navigate a sinister social clique and the treachery of her own mind in this “complex psychological thriller” (CrimeReads) that is perfect for fans of Megan Miranda and Layne Fargo.

When Sarah Taylor arrives at the exclusive St. Ambrose School, she's carrying more baggage than just her suitcase. She knows she's not like the other girls-if her shabby, all-black, non-designer clothes don't give that away, the bottle of lithium hidden in her desk drawer sure does.

St. Ambrose's queen bee, Greta Stanhope, picks Sarah as a target from day one, and she is relentless in making sure Sarah knows what the pecking order is. Thankfully, Sarah makes an ally out of her roommate Ellen “Strots” Strotsberry, a cigarette-smoking, devil-may-care athlete who takes no bullcrap. Also down the hall is Nick Hollis, the devastatingly handsome RA, and the object of more than one St. Ambrose student's fantasies. Between Strots and Nick, Sarah hopes she can make it through the semester, dealing with not only her schoolwork and a recent bipolar diagnosis, but Greta's increasingly malicious pranks.

Sarah is determined not to give Greta the satisfaction of breaking her. But when scandal unfolds, and someone ends up dead, her world threatens to unravel in ways she could never have imagined in this delicious, “riveting, twisty read” (Fiona Davis, New York Times bestselling author) that will stay with you long after you turn the last page.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

05/15/2023

Ward (the Black Dagger Brotherhood series) delivers a diffuse slice of dark academia set in the rarefied halls of the titular school. The year is 1991, and 15-year-old narrator Sarah Taylor has been admitted to the prestigious Greensboro, Mass., institution on scholarship. On the first day of school, Sarah, in her black clothes and steel-toed boots, feels out of place among the other girls, “who look like they’ve stepped out of the rainbow page of a United Colors of Benetton ad.” Her foreboding is justified: she’s soon being bullied by a clique of mean girls captained by the slim, blonde Greta Stanhope. What’s more, Sarah has recently been diagnosed as bipolar and is on daily doses of lithium to keep her tethered to reality; as a result, there’s a smudgy line between real events and those she imagines. When someone turns up dead, that blurriness becomes a major problem for Sarah and everyone around her. The novel begins well, with strong characters and effectively blunt prose, but Ward takes so long to get to the meat of the action that it begins to feel indulgent. Before they reach the solid conclusion, many readers will have drifted away. Agent: Meg Ruley, Jane Rotrosen Agency. (July)Correction: An earlier version of this review misidentified the author.

From the Publisher

Completely original, quietly chilling. Mean Girls meets We Were Liars in this compelling, cat-and-mouse thriller featuring enemies made, secrets kept, and tables turned.” —Lisa Gardner, New York Times bestselling author of One Step Too Far

* "Mental health, friendship, loyalty, jealousy, corruption, and love all have a place in this highly recommended novel that takes readers on a roller-coaster of events and emotions that the characters experience." Library Journal, starred review

“A complex psychological thriller.” —CrimeReads

"Ward tells the story of a vulnerable teen struggling to fit in at a tony boarding school with deep compassion and a lyrical ferocity. A riveting, twisty read." Fiona Davis, New York Times bestselling author of The Magnolia Palace

“An intricate, unflinching portrait of growing up, fitting in, and speaking out. The St. Ambrose School for Girls is both a taut thriller and a study on the intensity of teenage relationships and coming-of-age emotions. With its vivid campus setting, twisty mystery, and cast of complicated female characters, this story will burrow into readers’ heads and stay there.” —Laurie Elizabeth Flynn, author of The Girls Are All So Nice Here



“A twisty, claustrophobic thriller...that readers who like a deep POV will enjoy." —Booklist



"Complex and gripping." —Kirkus

"The brilliant and oh-so-talented Jessica Ward (who also writes as JR Ward) explodes into the realm of literary suspense with the completely immersive and utterly propulsive THE ST. AMBROSE SCHOOL FOR GIRLS. A master class in voice—oh that voice!—and cinematic setting, I could not turn the pages fast enough, compelled to find out what happens to Sarah Taylor, Ward's unique and relatable 15-year old neurodivergent student who steps across the boundaries of an elite prep school and into mean girls, corruption, lust and murder. We journey toward truth, friendship, love and trust—seeing it all through the eyes of this instantly iconic young woman who understands the world in a “different” way. Haunting, terrifying, and ultimately redemptive, you will never look at your fifteen-year-old self the same way again. I adored this book! And I am telling everyone." —Hank Phillippi Ryan, USA Today bestselling author of THE HOUSE GUEST

Library Journal

★ 04/01/2023

Ward, who writes contemporary romance as Jessica Bird and paranormal romance as J.R. Ward, makes her latest a coming-of-age novel set in 1991—the era of Guns N' Roses, early Nirvana, and Sarah Taylor, who arrives at the St. Ambrose School for Girls. The author skillfully weaves the tale of Sarah, who recently received a bipolar diagnosis, as she navigates an elite boarding school. At St. Ambrose, she feels alone and friendless, but quickly finds that her roommate, Ellen "Strots" Strotsberry, has her back when she is targeted by Greta Stanhope, the dorm bully and their next-door neighbor. Although Sarah's experience is the focal point of the first half of the book, the second half is filled with twists as it turns a dangerous corner into a mystery involving sexual abuse by an adult resident-assistant, cover-ups of student violence, and even murder. Readers will learn, along with the protagonist, that people are much more than what they project on the surface. VERDICT Mental health, friendship, loyalty, jealousy, corruption, and love all have a place in this highly recommended novel that takes readers on a roller-coaster of events and emotions that the characters experience.—April Crowder

Kirkus Reviews

2023-05-24
A teenager at a boarding school grapples with social hierarchies, bullying, and murder.

It’s Sarah Taylor’s first day at the St. Ambrose School for Girls, and she’s hoping for a fresh start. She’d like to ditch her mother's nickname for her, Sally, and reintroduce herself as Bo. But her dreams of a new beginning are dashed when her social-climbing mother, Tera, introduces herself to a family dropping off daughter Greta Stanhope. Tera declares that Greta and Sarah will become the best of friends. Sarah immediately knows the truth: “My mother is wrong. Greta and I will never be friends.” And she knows something else, too: “And one of us is going to be dead by the end of the semester.” Sarah is not wealthy like her new classmates, dresses only in black, and has bipolar disorder: a trifecta of differences that will immediately cast her to the bottom of the social ladder. But instead of simply being ignored, Sarah becomes Greta’s object of social torture. Sarah has no friends, and while she would love to be friends with her roommate, Ellen Strotsberry, Strots offers strong loyalty but little companionship. As Sarah begins to uncover the secrets filling her dorm, her drama with Greta reaches a fever pitch, and so too do the intense hallucinations brought on by her bipolar disorder. Sarah is an unreliable narrator, and the reader will be deeply swept up in the task of figuring out what, and whom, to trust. While it is evident that Ward has attempted to treat her protagonist’s bipolar disorder with sensitivity, thoughtfulness, and at times a poignant humor, her portrayal of Sarah does dip dangerously into the stereotype that people with mental illnesses are inherently violent.

A complex and gripping, if flawed, unraveling of the secrets and lies of teenage girls.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940176859867
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Publication date: 07/11/2023
Edition description: Unabridged
Sales rank: 671,001
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