cover image The St. Ambrose School for Girls

The St. Ambrose School for Girls

Jessica Ward. Gallery, $27.99 (368p) ISBN 978-1-982194-86-4

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.