BACKKLASH
HERE COMES THE BACKKLASH
Ep. 71: FROM THE ATTIC TO THE STAIRCASE [feat. @GeyInterrupted]
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Ep. 71: FROM THE ATTIC TO THE STAIRCASE [feat. @GeyInterrupted]

The Dark Allure of V.C. Andrews and the Tantalizing Grip of True Crime

MY SWEET AUDRINA (1982)

FLOWERS IN THE ATTIC (1979)

THE STAIRCASE (2004)

The Disappearance of Tara Calico (1988 missing person, unsolved)

Follow Q: https://x.com/geyinterrupted

Complete show notes: https://backklash.substack.com/p/episode-71

V.C. Andrews wasn’t just a literary phenomenon; she was an iconic and influential contributor to the 1980s cultural zeitgeist. Her smash-hit novels Flowers in the Attic (1979) and My Sweet Audrina (1982) catapulted her into the upper echelon of brand-name novelists and positioned her as a pioneer in the nascent Young Adult Fiction market. Andrews’ lurid tales of forbidden lust, youthful despair, elite imposters, and shocking family secrets made her a household name and crowned her the reigning queen of the American Gothic novel. Her eccentric signature style, turbocharged with yearning and designed to pull readers into gripping dramas where innocence—both of her heroines and her readers—was unmade, remains unforgettable.

By the mid-1980s and well into the 2000s, V.C. Andrews was a name recognizable on bookshelves across the nation. But who was she, really? Even during her lifetime—which ended in 1986, only a few short years into her late-blooming literary success—little was known about the mysterious author. Decades later, many fans weren’t even aware she had died. Through the prolific work of her ghostwriter, Andrew Neiderman, her name continued to grace dozens of bestsellers. Yet the woman herself remained an enigma. Was there any truth to the long-whispered rumor that Andrews’ deliciously dark tales—infamous for their scenes of violence against children and themes of incest—were based on true events?

Ms. Virginia Cleo Andrews in her days as an illustrator

In this gripping edition of HERE COMES THE BACKKLASH, Poolhouse and Q (Thots & Prayers, Twink Death) take a plunge into the seedy underbelly of the American mythos in a revealing discussion about the life and works of V.C. Andrews, the dark secret of American YA fiction. The boys guide us through the crumbling, sprawling manor of the V.C. Andrews legend—up the creaky, blood-splattered staircase to that fateful attic where so many secrets are kept: the secrets of the author, her works, and American life itself.

MY SWEET AUDRINA (1982)

FLOWERS IN THE ATTIC (1979)

THE STAIRCASE (2004)

The Case of Tara Calico (1988 missing person, unsolved)

From The Estate of VC Andrews vs. United States:

https://casetext.com/case/estate-of-andrews-v-us

The Final V.C. Andrews Interview [??] - from the set of Flowers in the Attic, 1986:

A collection of the iconic die-cut book jackets from Pocket Books. Andrews’ Vanda Corporation was apparently heavily involved in the art direction for these portraits. Pictured here are the first three franchises: The Dollangers, The Castilles, and The Cutler series.

The Staircase (2004)

The Disappearance of Tara Calico (1988 missing person, unsolved)

The photo found in a parking lot in Port St Joe, Florida in 1989. Many believe the girl in the image was Tara Calico. Note the copy of My Sweet Audrina in the foreground.

Despite the aggressive declaration of wikipedia fact checkers, the boy’s identify was indeed confirmed:

https://newspaperarchive.com/other-articles-clipping-jun-29-1990-378015/

the official story: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disappearance_of_Tara_Calico

Program Notes

(0:00) - Selections from “Whitefern” (My Sweet Audrina)

(2:33) - welcome backk, Q

(7:04) - The World of V.C. Andrews

(19:00) - Flowers in the Attic

(39:03) - My Sweet Audrina & The Staircase

(56:39) - The YA Subversion

(1:05:50) - The Disappearance of Tara Calico

Episode Mixtape

Christopher Young - Theme from Flowers in the Attic (1987)

Billie Eilish - Birds of a Feather (bumper)

Animotion - Obsession (bumper)

Slayyyter - Miss Belladonna (poolhouse dub)

Discussion about this podcast

BACKKLASH
HERE COMES THE BACKKLASH
HERE COMES THE BACKKLASH is an ultra-cosmic broadcast from the intriguing imagination of the iconoclastic pop art producer and "disco shock jock," the good Doctor Reverend DJ POOLHOUSE. poolhouse transmissions and anon on anon discussions are transformed into an endlessly consumable, ever-unfolding mixtape of the mysterious, the provocative, and the absurd. this is armed audio warfare in the form of an American alchemical samizdat, brimming with madness and magnanimity in equal parts.
HERE COMES THE BACKKLASH is unlike anything you've heard before.
content warning: NSFW
backklash is a free-speech enterprise.
show notes: backklash.substack.com
website: backklash.org
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