About This Book
A privileged seven-year-old girl named Gwendolyn lives under strict supervision in an ornate home and copes with persistent loneliness and small disappointments. Her days follow rigid routines imposed by caregivers, and private rituals — measuring herself against a mirror, tallying calendar days — expose a longing for growth, attention, and ordinary freedom. From the nursery window she watches neighborhood workers with envy and invents fantasies of a more spontaneous life. The narrative tracks her quiet observations, imaginative escapes, and emotional responses, contrasting material comfort with emotional neglect and the aching need for companionship and agency.
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