Wednesday, January 26, 2011

My Sister's Keeper

So I am about a few years late.

The only reason I bought this book was because of the rave I heard about the author. I just had to find out for myself what the rave was all about, and so decided to pick up this very title out of sheer randomness on one of my book-shopping spree a long while back. (I also heard that the author tend to go for heart-breaking and gut-wrenching content)

I must have had this book for at least a good 3 years by now, but somehow have never been compelled to read it. I would inevitably wound up fishing for other books instead.

It has obviously been collecting dust on the shelf for quite some time, and since Spud came along, I hardly ever had time to do any reading at all. That is, until last week when I had a small window of opportunity to read while on a flight to upcountry on a work-trip for a day.

The book was a pretty easy read, with a story of a young girl who was conceived and genetically engineered to save her sister’s life. Her mother is hell-bent on not losing her sick child; her father is struggling to do ‘the right thing”, her brother is quite the rebel in the family, while this young girl is trying to define her being within the family and her “outside” life.

I did think the book was average initially. For a while I did not think the book was as poignant as other readers made it out to be. The gut-wrenching sadness I have heard about eluded me as I was reading the book…until I got towards the end. Without giving too much away, I must say that the ending came as a shocking surprise.

So unexpected the ending was, that when I started reading those sentences in the book towards the end, I actually had to pause, put the book down and take in a deep breath just to take in all the moment which happened in a split second. As soon as my eyes glazed over those words, I had this huge lump in my throat. Tears rolled down my eyes soon after

[I kind of feel cheated though…I mean, I was cruise-reading for several days, a few sections at a time; all the time thinking there’s nothing so sad or powerful in the way it was being written, and then BAM! I crumbled just like that]

I guess I would not understand the big hullabaloo behind this book had I not been a parent myself (probably the reason why I put off reading the book for so long).

I know that this book is made into a movie. However, I don’t think I’m going to watch it as, apart from the fact that I don’t really like Cameron Dias, I somehow think that movies tend to  always bring great injustice to the content of the book.


*Image from Google Images

1 comment:

Rachel said...

I read this a few years ago. I bawled my eyes out at the end of the book. Like you said, the ending made me sit up in shock for a few seconds, and re-read it before the waterworks. It remains one of the best books I have read in recent years. I read a few more of her books. This is still my favourite.

DO NOT watch the movie. Huge disappointment. Not only did they simplify the story - they changed it! The ending is simplistic and cliche. Your time is better spent playing with Sophia!