Hailed as a literary genius by the New York Times at age 12, she vanished off the face of the earth at 25 with just $30 in her pocket, leaving almost no trace. We explore the story of Barbara Newhall Follett, a brilliant mind whose real life tragically mirrored the escapist fiction she wrote as a child. It is a deeply human story of early fame, devastating family fractures, and an 80-year-old missing person mystery.
We trace her intensely literate upbringing, the invented world of Farksolia complete with its own language, and her novel The House Without Windows about a girl who runs away into nature. We follow her father’s abandonment and the collapse of her career, her marriage and the betrayal that echoed her father’s, her 1939 disappearance, and the bureaucratic failures that let her slip through the cracks, ending with a compelling modern theory about her fate.
- How an editor father blurred the line between parental love and professional approval
- The fire that destroyed her first manuscript, which she rewrote from memory
- Why a missing-person bulletin under her married name drew no press attention
- The 13-year delay before her mother forced an investigation
- The 2019 theory linking remains found near her old farmhouse to her disappearance
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