State of Wonder
Ann Patchett raises the bar with State of Wonder, a provocative and ambitious novel set deep in the Amazon jungle.
Research scientist Dr. Marina Singh is sent to Brazil to track down her former mentor, Dr. Annick Swenson, who seems to have disappeared in the Amazon while working on an extremely valuable new drug. The last person who was sent to find her died before he could...more
Research scientist Dr. Marina Singh is sent to Brazil to track down her former mentor, Dr. Annick Swenson, who seems to have disappeared in the Amazon while working on an extremely valuable new drug. The last person who was sent to find her died before he could...more
Audio, 0 pages
Published
June 7th 2011
by HarperAudio
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Sep 04, 2012
Danielle McClellan
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
favorites
I thought that Ann Patchett had made her great contribution to literature with "Bel Canto," which seemed to me to be the perfect novel, and stays high on the list of my very favorites. It is the book that I sold by hand as a bookseller and the book that I still pass along to friends. I should keep a stack of them since I have handed mine off so many times that I never know if I have a copy or not. A jewel box of structure, character, and language that left me overwhelmed with admiration.
Since r...more
Since r...more
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.

A scientific jungle experiment/investigation involving an elderly and rather secretive matriarchal doctor who leads the experiment, a missing/deceased company representative who was sent to investigate what the experiment is up to, and a female company representative (who happens to also be a former medical student of the matriarch) who is sent to investigate what happened to the previous company representative.
In spite of lengthy descriptions of the experiment and professorial soliloquising by...more
Dec 06, 2012
Carol
rated it
2 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
perhaps Patchett fans?
Shelves:
female-lead,
literary
Alas, I did not reach a state of wonder reading this. I would say I was in State(s) of: Interest, Appreciation, Mild Irritation, Interest Modified by Moments of Irritation, Shock, and then Milder Shock that dwindled into a State of General Annoyance, which would possibly make it the longest book title in history.
A super-summary: Although she trained as an OB/GYN doctor, Marina isgone to the dark side a pharmaceutical drug researcher who has studied cholesterol for the past seven years with her...more
A super-summary: Although she trained as an OB/GYN doctor, Marina is
Apr 03, 2013
Florence MacIntosh
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
Cultural: S American - Amazon
Recommended to Florence by:
Arah-Lynda Hay
I won’t give too much detail; you need to read this spoiler free. It’s deliciously gloomy and atmospheric, a dark adventure with Hitchcock style suspense. You’d expect a fearless heroine in a novel like this; instead you get Dr. Marina Singh, a neurotic woman with a really bad case of low self-esteem quite content with her life as a pharmacologist. That is till her boss & lover Mr. Fox (exactly the kind of ass insecure women go for) bullies her into taking on the quest of finding a missing c...more
It takes a brilliant writer to make a narcissist a sympathetic character, and Patchett achieves this in Dr. Annick Swenson, who is a foil to the main character, Dr. Marina Singh, from whose point of view the story is told. Marina is herself a complex and engaging character. The deaf boy, Easter, is another strong character.
Oct 02, 2011
Uomo di Speranza
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
cooler-than-sliced-bread
WARNING: SPOILERS PRESENT!
When everyone was in about second grade, their teacher taught them about how each butterfly was once an entirely alternative being called a caterpillar. She also must have thrown in the term "cocoon" while you were thinking about how mean the cockney in front of you was for stealing your colorful eraser. Nevertheless, most everyone conceived the concept that there were two inseparable stages to a butterfly's life, two states completely indistinguishable from one another...more
When everyone was in about second grade, their teacher taught them about how each butterfly was once an entirely alternative being called a caterpillar. She also must have thrown in the term "cocoon" while you were thinking about how mean the cockney in front of you was for stealing your colorful eraser. Nevertheless, most everyone conceived the concept that there were two inseparable stages to a butterfly's life, two states completely indistinguishable from one another...more
A great, great book. Dr Marina Singh is research scientist with a Minnesota based pharmaceutical company--she had been on track for a promising career as an ObGyn and had been under the tutelage of the formidable Dr Annick Swenson. However, a mistake by Singh during surgery caused Singh to abandon her medical career and turn to research.
Dr Singh is asked to go to the jungles of South America to recover the remains of her research partner Anders Eckman who died there while checking on the progres...more
Dr Singh is asked to go to the jungles of South America to recover the remains of her research partner Anders Eckman who died there while checking on the progres...more
I've read two previous Ann Patchett novels (Bel Canto and Run) and was disappointed by both. I wondered if I was being sucked in one more time by erroneous good reviews. No. I raced through this book, finishing it on Thanksgiving even though I had house-guests.
State of Wonder weaves together a number of threads that build a good novel where nearly everyone can find a personal "hook"-- personality conflicts, infidelity, secrets, wilderness exploration, science, medicine, parenting. One is the end...more
State of Wonder weaves together a number of threads that build a good novel where nearly everyone can find a personal "hook"-- personality conflicts, infidelity, secrets, wilderness exploration, science, medicine, parenting. One is the end...more
Feb 22, 2013
Christina White
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
science-fiction
I loved this book. It was full of mystery, adventure, and science. In all of the excitement the characters still managed to tug on my heart strings. This is the story of an obstetrician turned scientist named Dr. Marina Singh. She travels to the jungles of Brazil for a drug company who has a research team stationed there. Her mission is to find out the mystery behind one of her college's death and to get a status report on the fertility drug that that is supposed to be in development there. The...more
Added 7/24/11. (Book first published in 2010)
I love Ann Patchett's writing.
I hope this book will be as good as her others.
Jan. 2012 - Finished reading this wonderful book. Loved it! Below is a post I made at my group concerning this book on 12/28/11:
=============================================
I'm in the middle of reading State of Wonder (2011) by Ann Patchett. I picked it up from the library's new book section on the spur of the moment. Glad I did. It's just as good as (if not better than) Patc...more
I love Ann Patchett's writing.
I hope this book will be as good as her others.
Jan. 2012 - Finished reading this wonderful book. Loved it! Below is a post I made at my group concerning this book on 12/28/11:
=============================================
I'm in the middle of reading State of Wonder (2011) by Ann Patchett. I picked it up from the library's new book section on the spur of the moment. Glad I did. It's just as good as (if not better than) Patc...more
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.
This was my first book by Ann Patchett and will not be my last. The story was mesmerizing and drew me in from the first sentence. The visual images her writing suggests are colorful, rich and memorable, especially her description of the thickness of the Amazon and what "lies within." Her style, like the Amazon, kept flowing and added to the pace and enjoyment. My review is not a five as I am not a fan of how she tied up the loose ends.
This novel was just what I've been looking for this summer: a dazzling story, a meaty pile of ethical questions, characters that endure long after the book is over, and prose that gets more beautiful the more you notice it. I didn't love the novel's end; it was a bit too rushed for me, and the sudden pile-on of action left me wanting more of the slow build-up that carried us to the climax. It occurs to me, though, that wanting more of a book is as good a sign as any that it won me over completel...more
Jun 25, 2011
JoAnne Pulcino
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
adult-fiction,
book-club-selection
STATE OF WONDER
Anne Patchett
This marvelous atmospheric and multi layered novel takes place in the Amazon jungle where an emissary from a pharmaceutical company dies under mysterious circumstances at a research facility.
Dr. Marina Singh is sent to find the remains and effects, but must first locate the famous and reclusive gynecologist, Dr. Swenson who is in charge of the research. Dr. Swenson is researching the women of a local tribe who can conceive well past middle age, and other secret remedi...more
Anne Patchett
This marvelous atmospheric and multi layered novel takes place in the Amazon jungle where an emissary from a pharmaceutical company dies under mysterious circumstances at a research facility.
Dr. Marina Singh is sent to find the remains and effects, but must first locate the famous and reclusive gynecologist, Dr. Swenson who is in charge of the research. Dr. Swenson is researching the women of a local tribe who can conceive well past middle age, and other secret remedi...more
Jul 06, 2011
Julie (julie37619)
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
literary-fiction
My all-encompassing love for Ann Patchett is not a secret. She is my absolute favorite living author and I own every single one of her books. (Side note: remember that time she came to Chattanooga and I couldn't afford to go to the signing - still bitter about that). I've been anxiously waiting on the release State of Wonder for a while now, so when TLC gave me the opportunity to review, you know I was all over it. The day it came in the mail I called Luke at work because I was so excited. And...more
I read this at my mother's request and recommendation. She rarely recommends books and even more rarely asks me to let her know when I've finished so we can discuss it. And also, it talks place in the Amazonian rain forest, a place where I had recently spent some time. As you can probably tell, I'm delaying the start of this review. The book was okay. And I guess for me it falls into those categories of books I sometimes describe as "writers workshop-y" where the author's hand of god is felt for...more
I really wanted to like this book. After all, there are all the raving reviews, and it's the kind of story that usually grabs and holds my interest (jungle adventure + medical drama), but I couldn't finish it. In fact, I gave up after the 4th disc (the audio book has 11 discs). The story plods on like the stifling heat of the jungle, so slow, that it was all padding and no plot for almost half of the book! The author wrote painstaking all the tedious details of Marina's past (she has father issu...more
After all the rave reviews, my expectations were high. But this is no Bel Canto. The infuriatingly hapless heroine does not look ahead to scout out minor(everyone knows to pack some necessities in carry-on luggage, including cell phone)or major consequences of her actions and is locked in past failures and losses (one grows tired of her lost father nightmares and all her screaming). One could also hope for subtler symbolism and metaphors, less stilted dialogue, more skillful writing. For example...more
It was fairly obvious that Patchett's tale of a trip undertaken into an inhospitable jungle in order to track down a maverick researcher had taken inspiration from Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness; even the official synopsis above directly evokes this reference. While I've never read the original novel, I have seen Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now and so made the connection quite quickly. Of course, since Conrad's time the issues have changed and yet in other respects they are perennial. M...more
I had a good time with this book, and would like to give it 4 stars for enjoyment, but some significant flaws detract from my ability to recommend it to others.
State of Wonder is about a scientist, Dr. Marina Singh, working for a pharmaceutical company that is attempting to develop a new fertility drug in the Amazon. The company sends Marina to the research site to report on the progress of the drug, the brainchild of Marina’s former teacher, Dr. Swenson. But Marina, naturally, finds much more t...more
State of Wonder is about a scientist, Dr. Marina Singh, working for a pharmaceutical company that is attempting to develop a new fertility drug in the Amazon. The company sends Marina to the research site to report on the progress of the drug, the brainchild of Marina’s former teacher, Dr. Swenson. But Marina, naturally, finds much more t...more
I "read" this on CD while driving; audio reading is a different experience from visual, and I'm never sure if I'd feel the same way about a book if I'd experienced it through the other medium. I really enjoyed the reader here, and miss her now that I'm finished - it was as if I had a friend waiting for me whenever I got in the car recently!
Normally, my favorite books are ones where I feel I'm learning a lot, whether they be fiction or nonfiction. This wasn't one of those (what did I learn? I usu...more
Normally, my favorite books are ones where I feel I'm learning a lot, whether they be fiction or nonfiction. This wasn't one of those (what did I learn? I usu...more
I should have known there would be opera. After Bel Canto, I should have known. I'm sorry, but Patchett, Pretty Woman and Moonstruck notwithstanding, I just can't get behind the idea of opera as a redemptive force.
A modern retelling of Conrad's Heart of Darkness, that feels more like Apocalypse Now. Beautifully written. Some good situational humor ("The shaman would no doubt have direct billing with Vogel."). Plot wandery and repetitive, and, I suppose most damning for me, I didn't give a hoot a...more
A modern retelling of Conrad's Heart of Darkness, that feels more like Apocalypse Now. Beautifully written. Some good situational humor ("The shaman would no doubt have direct billing with Vogel."). Plot wandery and repetitive, and, I suppose most damning for me, I didn't give a hoot a...more
This is a really gripping book about a woman scientist who takes on a mission to go to Brazil to discover what happened to a co-worker who died while at a research site on a tributary of the Amazon among indigenous people. At this point in my reading, she is deep in the jungle, still trying to discover what is really going on with the research, and getting new surprises almost on every page. An amazing read!
I finished it in a grand swoop. The ending is amazing, and leaves you breathing hard.
The...more
I finished it in a grand swoop. The ending is amazing, and leaves you breathing hard.
The...more
I knew from Bel Canto that Patchett was likely to succeed in capturing a character's descent into the heart of darkness with all the melodrama of the jungle - the exotic tropical flora, piercing insect bites, sweaty, sleepless nights, and mysterious tropical diseases. And she delivers, with overtones of Joseph Conrad and Fitzcarraldo. I appreciate Bel Canto a little more, mainly because the seduction felt more subtle, the sources not so obvious; and the characters feel integral to the novel's te...more
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.
"The minute she stepped into the musty wind of the tropical air conditioning, Marina smelled her own wooliness. She pulled off her light spring coat and then the zippered cardigan beneath it, stuffing them into her carry-on where they did not begin to fit, while every insect in the Amazon lifted its head from the leaf it was masticating and turned a slender antenna in her direction..."
And so begins a perilous journey into the dark heart of scientific wonder for pharmaceutical lab researcher Mari...more
And so begins a perilous journey into the dark heart of scientific wonder for pharmaceutical lab researcher Mari...more
I read State of Wonder over the weekend. It’s the story of a scientist who goes to Brazil to find out what happened to her colleague (who she learns has died on the first page of the book) and to the fertility research project he was checking up on. There are a lot of complications. Along the way, she deals with old personal and professional wounds and ponders being single in her early 40s and decisions she has made about family and children. Being childless (by choice) in my early 40s and havin...more
If I had my druthers (and the means), I'd give this book 3 1/2 stars. Ann Patchett engages her readers with a fluid writing style that pulls them along with the narrative. She also manages to create a strong main female character with a clear voice.
The gist of the story is that scientist Marina Singh, tasked by her company to track down old mentor Dr. Annick Swenson in the Amazon jungle, descends into a world that challenges the choices she has made with her life and career. Eschewing a career...more
The gist of the story is that scientist Marina Singh, tasked by her company to track down old mentor Dr. Annick Swenson in the Amazon jungle, descends into a world that challenges the choices she has made with her life and career. Eschewing a career...more
| topics | posts | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| did anyone else catch this? SPOILER! | 112 | 1923 | May 14, 2013 08:41pm | |
| Live Video Chat with Ann Patchett | 369 | 518 | May 07, 2013 08:50pm | |
| You'll love this ...: State of Wonder | 33 | 84 | Apr 11, 2013 04:05pm | |
| William T. Cozby ...: State of Wonder | 1 | 2 | Mar 22, 2013 09:33am | |
| Inspiration Lane: State of Wonder | 7 | 16 | Mar 15, 2013 10:14am | |
| Inspiration Lane: Group Discussion | 1 | 14 | Mar 15, 2013 10:11am |
Ann Patchett is an American author. She received the Orange Prize for Fiction and the PEN/Faulkner Award in 2002 for her novel Bel Canto. Patchett's other novels include The Patron Saint of Liars, Taft, and The Magician's Assistant, which was shortlisted for the Orange Prize. She is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship and received the Nashville Banner Tennessee Writer of the Year Award in 199...more
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