Plot Summary?
We’re just getting started.

Add this title to our requested Study Guides list!

SuperSummary Logo
Plot Summary

Keeping the Castle

Guide cover placeholder
Plot Summary

Keeping the Castle

Patrice Kindl

Fiction | Novel | YA | Published in 2012

Plot Summary

Set in nineteenth-century England, American author Patrice Kindl’s young-adult Regency romance novel Keeping the Castle (2012) follows seventeen-year-old protagonist Althea Crawley, a poor, beautiful, outspoken young woman who is the sole supporter of her family. In her quest to find the wealthiest suitor in the land, she vies for the affections of the dashing Lord Boring and his rude relative, Hugh Fredericks. Thematically, the novel emphasizes the importance of staying true to one’s self, following one’s heart, and never allowing another person to define one’s worth. The novel has been hailed as “a romp of a Regency romance” by Kirkus Reviews and “a very satisfying story” by BCCB.

Narrated in the first-person by Althea Crawley, the story begins in nineteenth-century Lesser Hoo, a coastal town in Yorkshire. Althea lives with her impoverished family in Crawley Castle, aka Crooked Castle, a crumbling structure on the cliffs built by her great-grandfather, Mr. Crawley. Althea lives with her mother, Miss Winthrop, as well as her four-year-old brother Alexander, and her two rich but stingy stepsisters, Charity and Prudence.

Althea is a beautiful young woman, but she is also poor due to the sudden death of her father and the massive debt Crawley Castle cost her great-grandfather. Outspoken, she gets into trouble by speaking her mind with little regard for how others feel. Althea laments that she is of marriageable age, but due to her lack of money, cannot find a wealthy suitor. Her mother tells her that she must marry a wealthy man to live up to her role as the family’s main breadwinner. This declaration sets off a series of balls, hunts, and courting rituals to find a suitable mate for Althea. In addition to finding a rich husband, Althea must ensure Alexander inherits Crawley Castle when he is older, as instructed. If Althea fails to complete these tasks, her family will surely starve.



Althea, Miss Winthrop, and the two stepsisters attend a Court ball to find Althea a partner. At the ball, Althea, introduced to a number of potential suitors, is soon drawn to the rich and handsome Lord Boring, the Baron who resides in Gudgeon Park. Althea and Lord Boring immediately hit it off and soon decide to get married. Althea meets Lord Boring’s relative, Hugh Fredericks, whom she finds to be extremely annoying at first. She doesn’t censor her thoughts and feelings, often blurting out inappropriate remarks about Mr. Fredericks’s demeanor. Mr. Fredericks does likewise, and the two have ill-mannered arguments that continue throughout the novel.

As Althea continues her courting rituals, Miss Vincy, a talented artist and the daughter of a wealthy industrialist, visits her family. Although she has considerable wealth, Miss Vincy suffers severe facial scars left from a smallpox infection. When Miss Vincy and her family take residence in Gudgeon Park, she and Althea become close friends. Yet, when Miss Vincy seemingly comes between Althea and Lord Boring, Althea begins to consider Miss Vincy a threat.

Due in part to Althea’s brutal honesty, Lord Boring begins spending a lot of time with Charity. As they become closer, Lord Boring realizes Charity has saved a fortune. As a result, Lord Boring and Charity decide to get married. This stuns everyone in Lesser Hoo, considering how much time Lord Boring spent courting Althea. Shortly after, Althea discovers that Miss Vincy was once married, and is now a widow. Althea also learns Miss Vincy does not want to remarry, and that she has a very sick young son named Leon. Althea agrees to help Miss Vincy with Leon, strengthening their relationship in the process, and no longer considering Miss Vincy a threat.



A strong rainstorm hits Lesser Hoo and lightning strikes part of Crooked Castle. This causes half of the already crumbling structure to break off and fall into the sea. Nobody is injured, but this devastates the Crawley family, leaving Althea with little time to save the castle and ensure it is passed onto Alexander. The following morning, Mr. Fredericks reveals a secret to Althea. He tells her that Lord Boring is not as wealthy as he claims to be; it is he who is rich. Mr. Fredericks also admits that Lord Boring was forced to marry Charity for her money; if it were up to his heart, Lord Boring would have married Althea. Mr. Fredericks not only offers to pay to fix the damages to Crooked Castle, but he also confesses his love for Althea, asking her to marry him. Although they did not hit it off at first, Althea and Mr. Fredericks have grown closer through their similar, ill-mannered personalities. Althea accepts Mr. Fredericks’ proposal and they plan to wed in the near future. When Althea also learns that her mother is likely to marry the Marquis of Bumbershook, she becomes even happier. The Crawley’s financial troubles are solved, and Althea lives happily ever after.

In addition to Keeping the Castle, Patricia Kindl has written five novels. They include Owl in Love, The Woman in the Wall, Goose Chase, Lost in the Labyrinth, and A School for Brides: A Story of Maidens, Mystery and Matrimony. In 1995, Kindl was awarded the Mythopoeic Fantasy Award, Children’s Fiction, for her debut novel, Owl in Love.

Continue your reading experience

SuperSummary Plot Summaries provide a quick, full synopsis of a text. But SuperSummary Study Guides — available only to subscribers — provide so much more!

Join now to access our Study Guides library, which offers chapter-by-chapter summaries and comprehensive analysis on more than 5,000 literary works from novels to nonfiction to poetry.

Subscribe

See for yourself. Check out our sample guides:

Subscribe

Plot Summary?
We’re just getting started.

Add this title to our requested Study Guides list!


A SuperSummary Plot Summary provides a quick, full synopsis of a text.

A SuperSummary Study Guide — a modern alternative to Sparknotes & CliffsNotes — provides so much more, including chapter-by-chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and important quotes.

See the difference for yourself. Check out this sample Study Guide: