Handle with Care by Jodi Picoult
Book Review by Erin Collazo Miller, About.com
The Bottom Line
I have mixed feelings about Jodi Picoult. She knows how to write page
turners that evoke strong emotions; however, her books sometimes remind me of Lifetime
movies -- sure they can make me cry, but that doesn't mean they actually
achieve depth. I was especially disappointed with Picoult's last release,
Change of Heart, so I picked up Handle with Care with a good
bit of skepticism. The good news: Handle with Care is one of Picoult's
better books. She develops the characters better than in Change of Heart,
and provides more action to keep the book moving. This is a page turner that
will appeal to book clubs.
Pros
- 'Handle with Care' is a page turner.
- Picoult develops the characters well.
- 'Handle with Care' raises lots of talking points for book clubs.
Cons
- 'Handle with Care' is depressing.
- The scenario is extreme -- not entirely believable.
Description
- 'Handle with Care' by Jodi Picoult was first published in March 2009.
- Publisher: Atria
- 496 Pages
Guide Review - 'Handle with Care' by Jodi Picoult - Book Review
All Jodi Picoult’s books are a
little bit like watching a train wreck -- painful yet strangely interesting to
watch. Handle with Care is no different -- the plot is depressing,
you'll be angry with many of the characters, and you may end up throwing your
book at the end. Still, if you have read Picoult before, you know that's what
you should expect. The question, then, is whether this is a train wreck worth
watching. The answer: you won't want to look away.
Handle with Care is the story of a family with two daughters. The
second was born with brittle bone disease, a condition that makes her bones
break easily and that limits her height and movement. When Willow (the daughter
with a disability) is four, her parents decide to sue their OB for
"wrongful birth," claiming that Willow's condition should have been
diagnosed earlier in the pregnancy so that they could have terminated the pregnancy.
Sound controversial? Add to it the fact that the OB is the mother's best
friend, who has remained close to the family since the birth, then throw in a
neglected and bulimic older sibling, and you have classic Picoult.
Extreme as it is, Handle
with Care works well because the characters are complicated and it is not
clear where the plot will go. As a reader, you may find yourself unsure of what
you want -- do you hope the family wins so that they can pay their medical
bills and provide a better life for their daughters or do you think the parents
are being selfish and that no amount of money can undo hearing that your
parents may not have wanted you? This is one of many ethical questions Handle
with Care raises, which is why it would be a good choice for book clubs
looking for lively conversation.
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