My Sister's Keeper

My Sister's Keeper

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4.01 of 5 stars 4.01  ·  rating details  ·  446,533 ratings  ·  24,091 reviews
"New York Times" bestselling author Jodi Picoult is widely acclaimed for her keen insights into the hearts and minds of real people. Now she tells the emotionally riveting story of a family torn apart by conflicting needs and a passionate love that triumphs over human weakness.Anna is not sick, but she might as well be. By age thirteen, she has undergone countless surgerie...more
Mass Market Paperback, 500 pages
Published May 19th 2009 by Pocket Books (first published May 18th 2004)
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Lindsay
Mar 17, 2008 Lindsay rated it 1 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Jodi Picoult fans, chick lit fans
Shelves: misc
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Lisa
As I said before: I'm still reading this book but I'm not sure why. My mom lent me the book and she loved it, everyone tells me they loved it and I'm sort of hating it while I read. I just want to finish it and move on. Maybe I'll change my tune when it's over.

Well... I hate it less, but I'm still not in love with it. I think I know the problem, though. It's Jodi Picoult. My mom loves her, my sister loves her, everyone I know loves her and I can't stand her. She just writes in this odd way that...more
Bex
Jun 19, 2012 Bex rated it 1 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: No one.
Ugh- I've read some of these reviews and people keep saying great story- the end sucked... 4 stars! Okay- the ending sucking is a bit of an understatement. It was probably the worst ending to anything I've ever read or seen in my whole life- and I've watched UltraViolet and Sunshine and read some pretty terrible books.

Picoult rambles- and rambles. She takes a family, smacks them with the most typical "dysfunctional family" stereotypes and then add a topic that *should* be interesting (aka medica...more
Lobeck
Jun 30, 2007 Lobeck rated it 1 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: people who like trash pop fiction
this book is a shameless and unskillful manipulation of human emotions. i felt dirty when i was done with it. the story is on par with cheap natural disaster movies like deep impact that are formulated to tug at your heartstrings in very predictable ways. the author painfully over uses the dramatic blackout technique where she writes a line that's trying too hard to be clever or profound and then fades to black - aka, leaves extra space before the next paragraph or ends a chapter - sometimes wit...more
Mery
Jika kau menggunakan cara yang salah secara moral untuk menyelamatkan hidup anakmu, apakah itu menjadikanmu ibu yang buruk?

bagaimana menjawabnya?
Aku harus kasih bintang berapa?
Aku harus komen apa?
Buku ini bikin aku terenyuh dari awal sampai akhir...
Bikin marah dan menangis di waktu yang sama...

Begitu tersentuh dengan kegigihan Sara memperjuangkan nasib Kate yang menderita leukimia APL akut, sampai dia harus melahirkan seorang anak dengan rekayasa genetika hingga DNA anak itu 100% sama seperti K...more
Sammy
This book was stunning. In writing, in style, in plot, in character! It truly is one of those books that you really can't stop reading. Especially for me, because in a way it took me back to my Lurlene McDaniel days. Did anyone ever read her? She was always writing books about different teenagers and young children with terminal illnesses. I was addicted to those books. So it was no surprise when the young reader in me sort of jumped up when I saw a friend of mine reading this book and she descr...more
Richard
Rating: fifteen one-thousandths of a single star (out of five; p44)

Many are the yodels of praise for this horrifying book. The details of the main character's use as a farm animal for a more-favored older sibling are too grisly to recount without vomiting on my keyboard.

People die. Even when we don't want them to, and even when it hurts for them to, and even when we've given them life. It's happened to me. I know it hurts, but the ghastly vile disgusting nauseating practice of having a child *sp...more
K.D. Oliveros
My first book written by Jodi Picoult (born 1966) and I had mixed feelings about it. I don't know if I hate or love it so I just rate this with 2 stars that in Goodreads means, It's okay.

I have a friend in the office who is a solid Jodi Picoult fan. She encouraged me to read this a couple of years back as my intro to Picoult's world. I took the book home, read the first 10 pages, closed it and gave the book back to her the following morning. My reason? I did not like the 13-y/o Anna suing her pa...more
Nola
Apr 09, 2008 Nola rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: parents, christians,
Shelves: fiction-drama
I hate novels where parenting is questioned, simply because I too often find myself thinking, “Well I would never do THAT.” I then have to do the whole knock-on-wood routine and hope that I didn’t just invite divine retribution for being too judgmental. So it was with Jodi Picoult’s novel My Sister’s Keeper. After reading the summary of the novel, I knew that I would never make the choices that the parents shown did. After reading the novel, I found myself questioning what I might really do if...more
Mitabird
My Sister's Keeper was one of the most heart wrenching stories I've ever read. Anna's sister, Kate, is dying from a rare form of leukemia. She was conceived as a genetic match to help save her sister's life. It was supposed to be a one-time deal, but over the course of her 13 years, Anna has donated multiple times. Her sister is in need of a kidney and Anna's decided she's had enough of being told how to use her body. She decides to sue her parents for medical emancipation and refuses to give up...more
Penny
Anyone who has a kid has probably, at one point or another, battled with them at bedtime. That's what I do, every night. There is much yelling, crying, begging and pleading. It's horrible.

Kid #3 is out like a light, so she's not part of the problem. Kid #2 puts up a good fight, whining and tantrum throwing, but eventually she succumbs to her sleepiness. Kid #1, however... well, she's another story altogether.

At night, she's afraid of everything and feels that if she sleeps something will get he...more
Sharon
Sep 17, 2007 Sharon added it  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: no one, really
Shelves: sofarin2007
it would be impossible for me to overstate how much i hated this book. I hated, hated, hated this book. I guessed the end 5 pages into it, but read it through anyway (why?)(probably because everyone else in nursing school was reading it and wanted to tell me how good it was. Never trust nurses). Interesting for the medical information, and if it convinced one person to become an organ donor it served its purpose in the world, but man, was it hard to read. It was trite and simplistic and written...more
Lynn
**If you're planning on reading this book, don't read my review. I give away the horribly disappointing ending. On second thought, don't read this book, read my review.**

I know several people who have read this book, so I decided to give it a go. I was immediately intrigued by the subject of the book. The Fitzgerald family has one daughter, Kate, dying of kidney failure. The kidney failure is a result of her weary body's 14 year battle with a rare form of leukemia. Their other daughter, Anna, is...more
Annalisa
If you haven't read the book it's about a girl (Kate) with leukemia whose parents had a second genetically matched child (Anna) to help with blood and bone marrow to save their first daughter. As the girls grow up, more and more is required of Anna until she's had enough of being nothing but an organ donor.

There are a lot of interesting points in the book, like what do you do when you have to pick one child over another, how do you balance your time and love between children especially when one...more
Peregrinn
Dec 28, 2008 Peregrinn rated it 1 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: cheesy drama lovers
Shelves: novels, by-women
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Madeline
The conflict alone is what makes this book fascinating - the story focuses on two sisters, Anna and Kate. The older sister, Kate, was diagnosed with leukemia when she was four. Knowing that their daughter would need blood donations, bone marrow, and possibly organ donations in the future, Kate's parents had another child whose sole purpose would be to provide a blood match for Kate. Thirteen years later, Anna gets tired of spending almost all her time in hospitals, giving bone marrow and blood t...more
Maggie
An ethical quandary, a family's dynamic, and a poignant love story. I laughed out loud, I sobbed. Truly powerful. Bravo, Ms. Picoult.
Aleeeeeza
Edit 2/29/12: THE MOVIE VERSION IS SO MUCH BETTER!!!! Seriously, go watch it. I DARE you to not cry.

The gist of the book is this: the Fitzgerald have a daughter, Kate, who's extremely fucking unlucky and her whole life basically revolves around getting disease after sickness after cancers. She almost dies when she's two, and her bro Jesse ain't a donor match, so her parents decide to have a genetically designed baby according to Kate's needs, who will eventually turn into spare parts machine for...more
Rita
Spoiler Alert. This review contains spoilers.

I hated this book so much. I only kept reading it because I had to find out why Campbell, the lawyer, had a service dog, since he kept that such a secret.

I hated the clichés (Julia chose just that moment to crash through the door… Anna chose that precise moment to speak up… Rita chose this moment to gag on bad writing…).

I hated the overwrought melodrama. Everything was just so saturated with heavy-handed tear-jerking prose that the book was soggy and...more
April
Apr 12, 2008 April rated it 1 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Overly emotional chick-lit addicts to whom meaning must be spoonfed
Recommended to April by: A book club I have chosen not to join
I read this for a book club I was going to join before I found a better one that meets at the library across the street. The subject and basic premise were interesting enough to keep me reading, but my god the writing was awful. AWFUL. Everytime one character asked another a question, the answer was some corny, overly-symbolic story from the past. The whole book was one clichéd analogy after another...she even put analogies WITHIN analogies. For example:

"About five years ago a new family bought...more
Marissa Noe
Mar 31, 2008 Marissa Noe rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Anyone unless you absolutely hate sad stories
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
April
I love me some melodrama, absolutely love it. Especially when the melodrama results in gasps, and anger, and tears. My jury is still out on My Sister's Keeper by Jodi Picoult. The plot had such huge potential. We've got a 13 year old girl, Anna, who is basically born as spare parts for her sister, Kate, who has leukemia. Well, Anna does not enjoy being harvested, so she initiates a lawsuit to be medically emancipated from her parents so she won't be obligated to be spare parts anymore. Oh, and t...more
Amy Galaviz
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Leila
It’s impossible to talk about this book without discussing the ending but I promise to give warning before I do so it won't be spoiled for those who haven't read the book yet.

I had two main concerns going into this book. The first was that it would be nothing more than a political commentary on stem cell and embryo research. While it does touch on these issues, the book does not take a stand or attempt to pontificate a political stance to the reader. While I am sure the author has her own belie...more
Heather
Feb 20, 2010 Heather rated it 1 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Adults, Book Clubs
Recommended to Heather by: Rory's Book Club
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Kathryn
This book was an extremely difficult read for me. I had to force myself to continue reading, as I didn’t want to feel as though I had wasted $14.00 by not completing it. It took about a month for me to finish the book and that is an unusual amount of time for me as I generally finish books in less than two weeks. I actually found myself scanning the pages and only reading the dialogue so I could move along towards the end.

What I really didn’t care for was that the story moved as slow as molasses...more
Melanie
Apr 06, 2009 Melanie rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Melanie by: Kjersti
I am torn as I write the review for this book. I am amazed at how masterfully Picoult is able to tell a story from viewpoints of half a dozen people, and really pull it off. There is no stereotypical heroine/villain in this book. As I read each chapter from a different character's viewpoint, I developed compassion for each one in an amazing way. I downright bawled my eyes out at the end and felt I had truly gained something from the read. I considered it a great shame to have to sift through so...more
Inge *Studying for Exams*
To save your daughter, you must sacrifice her sister.

If I had to describe My Sister’s Keeper in one word, it would be ‘confusing’. It’s confusing because it’s your typical Jodi Picoult novel – a controversial topic, lots of contrast and damn good arguments that make you root for one side one moment, then have you wheeling over to the opposite side the next. Same for the characters: just when you think you don’t like a character, there he/she goes and does something awesome and you smile. Then yo...more
Anne
My first taste of what Jodi Picoult has to offer. I love how she allows the reader to see the same story from different view points. And she picks topics that many people tend to view as "black and white" but are really filled with color.
Lena 714
This book is really amazing because it shows two sides of the story. One is about saving Kate which sounds like a really good idea when you look at it from Kate's perspective. But when you look at it from Anna's perspective it sounds horrible that your parents are making you donate a kidney that takes you out of some very important sports and events that are natural to happen in life. It also shows everything from different points of view which introduces you to how hard it is to deal with this....more
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topics  posts  views  last activity   
the mother 54 301 19 hours, 23 min ago  
E-xraordinary E-...: My Sister's Keeper! 1 4 May 11, 2013 03:28pm  
do you think its fair for Anna to die, or did Kate had to die? 232 1138 May 11, 2013 09:07am  
Like the movie? 78 368 May 06, 2013 09:28pm  
Other books by this author 21 92 Apr 28, 2013 01:48pm  
Movie adaptation? 26 155 Apr 28, 2013 06:04am  
Ouch, Jodi 16 170 Apr 20, 2013 08:42am  
My Sister's Keeper (Paperback)
My Sister's Keeper  (Hardcover)
My Sister's Keeper
My Sister's Keeper (Paperback)
My Sister's Keeper (Paperback)

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Picoult was born and raised in Nesconset on Long Island, New York. Her first story, at age 5 was "The Lobster Which Misunderstood." She studied writing at Princeton University, graduating in 1987, and had two short stories published by Seventeen magazine while still in college. Immediately after graduation, she took on a series of miscellaneous jobs, from editing at a textbook publishing company t...more
More about Jodi Picoult...
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