![]() McGinnis draws heavily upon the works of Edgar Allan Poe to deliver a gripping modern retelling of “The Cask of Amontillado.” Tress and Felicity are expertly fleshed out the chapters are written from alternating viewpoints of the two girls across their entire friendship. Sick of being the butt of everyone’s jokes, Tress has a plan to get Felicity to talk-one that involves a costume party in the crumbling Usher House, an empty coal chute, and a pile of bricks. ![]() ![]() Felicity was with the Montors the night they vanished, but she’s worked so hard to make the community forget she was there that she herself doesn’t remember what happened. What isn’t perfect is that her former best friend, Tress, won’t even look at her. Felicity Turnado doesn’t have a storied surname and everything that’s perfect in her life she’s earned on her own: her grades, her popularity, and the respect of the community. The town has turned its back on her, and she wants answers-or revenge. ![]() Now she lives on the Amontillado Animal Sanctuary-what the locals call “the White Trash Zoo”-with her alcoholic grandfather Cecil and a motley assortment of animals. Gr 9 Up–Tress Montor lost everything the night her parents disappeared seven years ago: her family, her friends, and the respect her last name usually demands in the town of Amontillado. ![]()
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