A beautiful and tragic blend of history and fictionBasically told as three stories in one, it is a beautiful blend of past, present, and an allegorical fictional tale that interweaves between the two. Each story was interesting in its own right. The beginning was a little slow, but when Minka begins...
I really enjoyed this book... as I've enjoyed pretty much every Jodi Picoult I've ever come accross, but that's beside the point. I find that she always writes about topics that aren't that easy, and this time was no different. There were a lot of narratives intermingling, but it was relatively easy...
The first two chapters were a bit tough to get through; but I am so glad that I did. The stories told in this book got more and more interesting as each chapter passed. By the end, I did not want to put it down. The ending was not what I thought it would be; yet it was appropriate and gave closur...
Goodreads reviewer Scarlet had it right: "Who the hell speaks only in Haiku??"Another one of those highly rated Jodi Picoult books that left me vowing to stop believing the average ratings. This was just Yuck. It gets one star for the Holocaust story but points deducted for the weirdness (see Haiku ...
As with most of her books, this one, too, was very well researched and very well written. However, sometimes, the silly sex and hackneyed expressions used by the main characters, juxtaposed against the background of a serious Holocaust investigation, seemed to me, to trivialize the monstrosity of th...
Sage Singer is a baker, a loner, until she befriends an old man who's particularly beloved in her community. Josef Weber is everyone's favorite retired teacher and Little League coach. One day he asks Sage for a favor: to kill him. Shocked, Sage refuses—and then he confesses his darkest secret – he ...
This seems something of a departure for Picoult - focusing as it does on the horrors of war and how terrible experiences affect the families of those who come after. Sage Singer is a very strong character and beautifully placed as a vulnerable baker within her community. I enjoyed her story very muc...
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