My Sister's Keeper
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The ending - What do you think should have happened and why.
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As a reader, I know as a rule this is what the writer wanted to happen to her, and yes, these things do happen in real life, i.e.: not all things turn out the way we wanted. Kudos to Picoult for reminding us of that? But hey, I would've wanted some kind of resolution with regards to her case; hence making a point on deciding what to do with her life and how that would turn out.
There's a lot of anger towards Anna within the family - one way or the other- and I'm pretty sure that were she to have survived, life might not be as happy as can be for her..



(The brother lets the cat out of the bag in court by saying to Anna, - Tell them Anna, it for Kate, Kate wanted this)


I did too. Many people seem to have hated the ending because they thought it was cheep or make the whole book useless. I thought it was the opposite of that. I thought it was to teach the audience that even though we may have one of the best days and everything seems to be going well, some freak accident can happen and screw up everything. This is the nature of life, and I think that Jodi Picoult wanted to capture that, not some perfect or cliche ending.

Yeah, I was actually screaming at my tv when Anna didn't die. I was watching it with my family and was waiting and waiting for it to happen, but it didn't. My family, whom hadn't read the book or knew how it ended, were confused with my outburst. After explaining it to them, they all got very upset with the movie changing the ending as we are all fans of good book to movie adaptations.


Throughout the novel, I did not completely sympathize with Anna, because I could also understand the parents and her sister and I felt that that was partly the author's intent. It was not a one-sided story. If anyone had to choose between Anna and Kate, it would have been a difficult choice anyway.
The ending also lightly suggests a perspective that was not really covered by the rest of the book - what is beyond what humans can do to choose life and death.

Many times, we forget that destiny is in play, maybe Anna had to come to this world to save her sister and she died saving her sister. Kate had to live this long and Anna was the reason for her existence. Sometimes no matter how hard you try, Sara Fitzgerald tried really hard to save Kate, Kate made an attempt to end her life twice....one was a failed attempt and second was convincing her sister to file a law suit and Anna did win the law suit and everything was going as planned but you can't fight destiny. I really applaud Anna's character. What a brave girl she was.....giving but at the same time felt sorry for her.
As far as the movie is concerned, I didn't like it at all. I think it took away the essence of the little moments which builds up your interest, emotions and drama. The movie to me was just a summary of a detailed, comprehensive and well written book. I don't mind the ending....I was either happy with both the ending. Kate's death was a fair ending and Anna's death was an unfair one which makes us realize that there isn't a fair happy ending every time otherwise this world would have been perfect.

Anna and Kate both didn't want to go through with the surgery. Anna was fed up with it all, and I don't blame her. Her whole life revolved around what Kate's needs. And I was fine with the umbilical cord because that didnt hurt her, but when she got older there should be an age where they should have went to counseling or something to have more of Anna's input on what was happening and what she wanted to do. And there would actually be someone there to tell the parents "you are messing this child up". I was surprised she wasn't emotionally fucked up.
In the end, her dying saved kate but also taught her parents, especially her mother, a lesson because she really took her granted. She got what she wanted in kate surviving but at the expense of loosing Anna and having to realize all the wrongs she had done.

Either way one was going to die.
I would have hoped no one died.



I see where you are coming from, and yes both a powerful, and sad

I totally agree, if it had to be one of them that died, at least a complication from the kidney operation would bring back the deep question of 'was it worth it to coerce or force her into donating her kidney. Instead she chose this cheesy questions which brought no questions and had no correlation to the rest of the book.
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I did not see the need to kill Anna off. It felt like a cheap last minute trick to try and get an emotional response from readers.
If Anna had been fighting against donating her kidney, killing her off and Kate receiving the kidney would have been more of a twist. But as it was, killing Anna off only sent the message that Anna was spare parts for Kate and nothing more.
I actually preferred the ending of the film but I think both would have been better if both girls had lived and Anna's lawsuit had just been about her wanting the right to make her own informed choices. It sounds as if she would still choose to help Kate, but it would be her decision alone. So the moto could have been 'the right to choose' instead of just 'girl beats cancer'.