Monday, December 21, 2009

ORB quarter 2

2nd Quarter Outside Reading Book Review
The pact, Jodi Picoult, Harper Perennial, 1998
Genre: love story

The story The Pact is about two families, Gold’s and Hartes’s, who have been inseparable. Their children, Chris and Emily, begin to start dating which is no surprise to the families. Soon their relationship becomes more serious, until one day Emily gets shot in the head and dies. Through out the book the families try to figure out who really killed Emily Gold. The story takes place in Bainbridge, New Hampshire.

“The Pact is so good that we can’t put it down…suspenseful, intelligently written, topical.” –Detroit Free Press

The writing style of this book is very different than I’ve ever read. Usually I read books that just tell the story in a continuous flow, from beginning to end. In The Pact Picoult changes views between now and then. During the now chapters you read about all the different clues the lawyers are finding out to prove who really shot Emily. In the then chapters you read about how the two families meet and how Emily and Chris’s relationship develops. Picoult puts in so much detail you can picture so perfectly the scene of Emily’s death or even get a feel of how Emily’s parents felt when they heard the news.

“She turned in the same direction, and they bumped noses hard, but then she laughed and it was all right because this was Em. Her mouth was the softest thing he’d ever felt, and he pulled on her jaw to make it open a little, and his tongue ran over the neat line of her teeth” (93).
OR
(I can’t decide)
Chris hugged her and buried his face in her neck. Emily could feel the exertion of his heart and his lungs. She imagined the crowd watching as they embraced. The fact that everyone knew someone like him had picked someone like her was one of the thing she loved about being Chris’s girlfriend” (140).



I have to say that this was probably the best book I’ve ever read. I loved reading about Emily and Chris growing up together, from when they were first born until Emily died. I can kind of relate to this book which makes it really cool. My parents are best friends with the Westbrook’s making me friends with their son, Jamie, just like the Gold’s and Hartes’s. This book had so much emotion in it, between Emily dying and then how much Emily and Chris loved each other. The story always left you wondering what was going to happen next so I couldn’t put the book down. I highly recommend it if you like love stories and mysteries.

2 comments:

  1. 1. Sabree's overall impression of the book was that she loved it, and that it was one of the best books she ever read.

    2. She noticed that the writing style was different than any other book she had ever read. The chapter's view changed from past/present a few times.

    3. Yes, I think she did chose interesting passage(s) because they gave you a sense of how Chris and Emily's relationship was.

    4. I think that this review was pretty good, because it told a lot about the story and how intense it was. It was convincing and made me want to read the book.

    5. Yes, I would read this book, because it sounds like something that could keep me interested in the story.

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  2. 1. Sabree's overall impression of this book was that it was one of the best books she's ever read, and is full of suspense and mystery.

    2. She noticed that the writing style went back and forth between "now" and "then", or past and present.

    3. Yes, I thought both of them were really good. It gives you snese of discription Picoult uses in the story, along with the relationship between the main characters.

    4.Sabree's format is very similar to the other reviews I read. She She did a really good job of explaing why she enjoyed it so much.

    5. I would consider reading this book because Sabree said, "that this was probably the best book I’ve ever read." She was really persuasive and her passages were very interesting and makes you want to read more

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