The Asylum for Wayward Victorian Girls explained

The Asylum for Wayward Victorian Girls
Author:Emilie Autumn
Language:English
Country:United States
Genre:Autobiography, Psychological Thriller
Publisher:The Asylum Emporium
Isbn:0998990922
Illustrator:Emilie Autumn
Release Date:2009 (1st edition), 2017 (4th edition)
Media Type:Print (hardcover), Print (softcover)
Pages:264 (2nd edition), 392 (4th edition)

The Asylum for Wayward Victorian Girls is a semi-autobiographical/psychological thriller novel by Emilie Autumn. It was published in 2009 as a companion to her 2009–2010 North American, European, and Australian tour, the Asylum Tour. The book chronicles Autumn's experiences in a modern day psych ward as well as those of a fictional young girl, "Emily-with-a-y", in Victorian England who is admitted into an insane asylum. The first and second editions, published in 2010, were large, hardcover, full-color illustrated editions, with glossy pages and weighing nearly five pounds.[1] This version of the book has since been discontinued due to the expense involved in printing, and as of 2017 the book is only available in black-and-white in ebook and paperback forms.[2] An audiobook version, narrated by the author, was released in 2016.[3]

In the style of her earlier Enchant Puzzle, the ebook version contains a treasure hunt called the Quest for Spoon of the Royals, the object of which is a silver spoon adorned with gemstones and crystals, which Autumn claims is hidden "somewhere in the world." The clues for solving the puzzle and finding the spoon are supposedly hidden within this edition of the book.[4] As of 2021, it has yet to be solved.

Plot

Told through the form of journal entries, the novel begins with Emilie's suicide attempt and subsequent forced admission to a psych ward. What was initially intended as a 72-hour hold turns into a longer stay when there is no room for her in the short-term ward and she is moved to the long-term ward. Emilie begins to describe the events of her life that led to her suicide attempt, including abuse she suffered both as a child and in her romantic relationships, and her experiences with bipolar disorder. She also documents the sad conditions in the hospital, from the inadequate food and overcrowding to the invasive way she and the other patients are watched and monitored by the doctors and nurses. She meets with Dr. Sharp, who seems to take an interest in her. Emilie attempts to befriend a fellow patient, Chloe, but Chloe is taken for electro shock therapy at four in the morning, and Emilie never sees her again. Emilie soon begins finding notes stuck in-between the pages of her own journal. Diary entries themselves, referred to as "Asylum Letters", the notes appear to be very old and purport to be written by a girl from 1800s London named Emily (referred to throughout the book as "Emily-with-a-y"), whose life bears striking similarity to Emilie's own.

Emily describes being born into poverty and joining the Unfortunate Girl's Music Conservatoire at a young age, where she is trained as a violinist. When Emily grows up, she learns that the Conservatoire is a front for a form of human trafficking where young girls are only trained to be sold to the highest bidder. She is sold into the Servitude of the Count de Rothsberg and made to entertain him and live with him in his mansion, forced to suffer his abuses. There, Emily forms a friendship and alliance with a maid, Anne, who gives her a skeleton key to the mansion. Together they make an escape attempt that ends with both of them jumping from a bridge into the Thames. Emily survives, but never sees Anne again. Emily begins to wander the streets of London and is soon arrested and taken into the custody of Madame Mournington, the headmistress of the Asylum for Wayward Victorian Girls. Emily is admitted to the asylum, where the head physician, Dr. Stockill, seems to take special interest in her. The building is squalid and decaying, haunted by ghosts, with striped wallpaper peeling off the walls. The meals are often rancid; in one instance a dead rat is found in the soup. Emily, along with the other inmates, are frequently subject to experimentation, torture, and sexual exploitation at the hands of the doctors and orderlies, or "chasers". However, Emily begins to become acquainted with life in the asylum, eventually being inducted into The Striped Stocking Society, a secret group of sane women within the Asylum (the name being a reference to the uniform the inmates wear; a white shift dress and striped stockings). She also comes to befriend Sir Edward and Basil, two talking rats.

Emily and the other inmates are exhibited in a circus-freak-show-style event known as "the Ophelia Gallery", where members of the public can pay to come and gawk at them. They are also forced by the doctors into a prostitution ring, with their pictures being shown to potential customers. Emily befriends the unwitting photographer, a man called Thomson, but once Thomson learns what his photographs are being used for and vows to help her escape, she never sees him again.

As conditions in the Asylum deteriorate, and the experiments on the girls become more extreme, Madame Mournington, who is also Dr. Stockill's mother, gives in to her conscience and gives Emily the key to the Asylum before taking her own life. Emily attempts to free the other girls, but is overpowered by Dr. Stockill. However, the key that Anne gave Emily begins to glow and takes on supernatural powers, and is inexplicably able to open the Asylum gates. The inmates take over the Asylum as the clock strikes four, taking their revenge on and killing the doctors and chasers who have tortured them for so many years, an event referred to as "the Tea Party Massacre". With Emily as their new leader, the girls turn the newly freed Asylum into a real sanctuary and continue to accept and care for new girls when they are dropped at the Asylum's doorstep. On New Year's Eve, as the girls celebrate on the rooftop, the decaying building begins to collapse, and Emily and the other girls jump to their deaths in a mass suicide.

In the present day, Emilie can not accept that the letters end there and that that is all there is to the story. She goes back through the previous letters only to find that they are all actually made of brown paper towel from the hospital bathroom, incoherently scribbled over with red crayon. Emilie begins to have a breakdown, demanding to know who took the real letters, and is forcefully taken by the nurses to an isolated room. There, as she tries to calm herself down, she leans against the wall, noticing a small crack in it. She begins picking at it, then scratching and tearing at the wall, pulling more and more of it away until the striped wallpaper of the Asylum is revealed underneath.

Characters

Modern

Main character and narrator of the book's Hospital Entries.

Victorian

Background and themes

As a partially autobiographical work, the book is based heavily on Autumn's experiences with bipolar disorder, psychiatric hospitalization, abuse, and misogyny. Autumn described the writing process as "painful, and necessary, and cathartic". The book was intended as a criticism of the state of modern mental healthcare by comparing it to that of the Victorian era; Autumn stated "you’ll learn there’s very little difference from asylums for ladies in 1841 and the ones for us now."[5] She also intended it as an empowering statement, saying "This is about what happens when the inmates finally join together and fight back against their abusers. I want to make my asylum what an asylum should be – a sanctuary."[6]

Musical adaptation

In March 2012, Autumn discussed her intention to write a full length "Broadway-style" musical based on The Asylum.[7] In July of that year, Autumn released the album Fight Like a Girl, which is based on the events of the book, and which she referred to as a "preview" of the musical. On September 22, 2018, she released The Asylum for Wayward Victorian Girls: Behind the Musical, which features several songs written for the musical.[8] [9]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Asylum Emporium - The Asylum for Wayward Victorian Girls . Welcome To The Asylum . https://web.archive.org/web/20100921131521/http://emilieautumn.com/shopAsylum.html . 21 September 2010 . dead.
  2. Web site: Autumn . Emilie . FAQ . The Asylum for Wayward Victorian Girls . 2 August 2021.
  3. Web site: The Asylum for Wayward Victorian Girls: 6-CD Box Set Audiobook . The Asylum Emporium . https://web.archive.org/web/20160721012448/http://www.asylumemporium.com:80/collections/books/products/asylum-audiobook . 21 July 2016.
  4. Web site: Autumn . Emilie . The Asylum Treasure Hunt - Quest for the Spoon of the Royals . The Asylum for Wayward Victorian Girls . 4 August 2021.
  5. Web site: Holmes . Mark . Interview with Emilie Autumn . Metal Discovery . 1 August 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110716200932/http://www.metal-discovery.com/Interviews/emilieautumn_interview_2010_pt2.htm . 16 July 2011 . 30 January 2010.
  6. Web site: Stanborough . Denise . Emilie Autumn . Bizarre Magazine . 1 August 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100604060630/http://www.bizarremag.com/entertainment/interviews/9292/emilie_autumn.html . 4 June 2010 . April 2010.
  7. Web site: Holmes . Mark . Interview with Emilie Autumn . 1 August 2021 . 10 March 2012.
  8. Web site: Emilie Autumn on Instagram: Plague Rats, YOU'VE DONE IT! Thanks to you, all 9 pieces of the new album cover are now visible in my IG grid, and you know at last... . Instagram.com . 2018-09-05 . 2020-03-23.
  9. Web site: The Asylum for Wayward Victorian Girls: Behind the Musical (Coming 09. - The Asylum Emporium. September 23, 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180923123916/https://www.asylumemporium.com/collections/music/products/the-asylum-for-wayward-victorian-girls-behind-the-musical. September 17, 2020. September 23, 2018.