Innocence (Mendelsohn novel)
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First edition hardbook cover | |
| Author | Jane Mendelsohn |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Genre | Fiction |
| Published | 2000, Riverhead |
| Publication place | United States |
| Media type | Print, e-book, audiobook |
| Pages | 208 pages |
| ISBN | 1573221643 |
Innocence is a bestselling horror novel by Jane Mendelsohn, first released on August 28, 2000, through Riverhead Books. It tells the coming-of-age story of a teenage girl named Beckett, and addresses themes of innocence, loss, mental illness, sexuality, and femininity.
Beckett is a teenage girl who moves to Manhattan with her father after the tragic death of her mother; at her new school, she is fascinated by three popular girls and the beautiful school nurse. Soon thereafter, the bloody bodies of the three girls are discovered near Beckett's apartment—seemingly the latest in their school's dark history of suicides. The school nurse begins dating Beckett's father, and Beckett is plagued by disturbing dreams featuring the three dead girls. As she grapples with the death of her mother, the tragedies at her school, and the incipience of her menstruation, she finds herself wrapped up in a media-saturated world of mixed messages, in which beauty is everything and the arrival of womanhood is equated to the loss of innocence. Mendelsohn employs the literary device of the unreliable narrator, leaving the reader uncertain of what's real and what's imagined as Beckett travels deeper and deeper into a world in which mysterious women drink the menstrual blood of virgins to maintain their youth and beauty—and Beckett becomes certain that they're coming for her.