My sister's keeper

No cover

Jodi Picoult: My sister's keeper (2005, ISIS)

531 pages

English language

Published Nov. 19, 2005 by ISIS.

ISBN:
978-0-7531-7443-2
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
58831131

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Anna is 13 years old and has just come of age where she starts to think she wants control of her own body, and so has to make a difficult decision whether to sue her parents for that right. Anna knows she was born for the sole purpose to help her older sister to fight childhood leukaemia. Anna isnt sick, but she has undergone countless surgeries, transfusions and shots to help save her sister. She would like respite from the constant blood transfusions she has to endure for the sake of her sisters health.

36 editions

reviewed My Sister's Keeper by Jodi Picoult (Pocket Books Fiction)

Found this to be a fun ride.

This was an engaging read for me. I had a hard time putting the book down because I wanted to see what was going to happen next.

I never watched the movie, so I had no idea what I was getting into with this one.

I can definitely understand why some people do not like this book at all. But I found it to be engaging enough that I wasn't bothered by a lot of the gripes others have had.

reviewed My Sister's Keeper by Jodi Picoult (Pocket Books Fiction)

Overly sentimental

I borrowed My Sister's Keeper by Jodi Picoult from my own sister who said it was a very emotional book. Picoult delves into the ethical and moral minefields caused by creating genetically designed babies. The youngest daughter of her imagined Fitzgerald family, Anna, was conceived solely in order to provide 'spare parts' for elder sister Kate who is dying from leukaemia. However, by the time she turns thirteen, Anna is fed up with repeated hospital visits and invasive operations so takes out a lawsuit to prevent any more of her body being harvested for Kate's benefit. The ensuing arguments threaten to tear the whole family apart.

Family members take turns narrating chapters throughout the novel so the story unravels from multiple perspectives. Unfortunately everyone speaks remarkably similarly so I often lost track of whose chapter I was reading. Picoult's prose is very manipulative too. This is an incredibly emotionally …

Review of "My Sister's Keeper" on 'Goodreads'

I'm not a fan of Picoult's writing style, but the subject matter in this book was intriguing and thought-provoking. Sixteen-year-old Kate was born with a very rare form of leukemia, and her mother is so determined to beat this disease that she and her husband conceive Anna, a "designer baby" genetically engineered to be a donor for Kate. So far, the 13-year-old Anna has donated platelets, blood, her umbilical cord, bone marrow, and now it's assumed that she will donate one of her kidneys in a last effort to save her sister's life. This is what Anna was conceived to do, but instead, she hires a lawyer in an effort to gain control over her body. I'll stop telling the story right there, but will point out that this novel makes some very real observations about what a serious illness can do to a family: the oldest child in this …

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Subjects

  • Sisters
  • Fiction
  • Leukemia
  • Patients
  • Donation of organs, tissues
  • Parent and child
  • Moral and ethical aspects

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