Jodi Picoult Books Reading Group. discussion
Books Under Discussion
>
*possible spoilers* Anyone read Change of Heart yet?
date
newest »

message 1:
by
Rachael
(new)
Mar 10, 2008 06:36PM

reply
|
flag


But i'm not sure about it yet either...

Has anyone else noticed the similarities to Stephen Kings 'The Green Mile'???



I finished last weekend. I was annoyed by the Green Mile like stuff too, she even acknowledges it when Crash (Cash? I forget already!) burns himself and calls Shay Green Mile. I don't really get why she had so many similarities, even with him bringing the bird back to life.
Even though I was annoyed by that stuff I wound up really liking it in the end. She has a way of putting things so they just break your heart, like when June says that when you hold the hand of your daughter for the first time you're holding the hand you'll be holding when you die, and when Maggie talks about not knowing what it feels like to have a child grow underneath your heart-made me weep.
I think ultimately I liked this one better than 19 Minutes or the Tenth Circle, I was bothered by the way she wrapped things up in the end of both but I didn't feel that way about this one.
What was everyone's take on the gum? When Father Michael gets Shay's stuff there are three packs of Bazooka in it. Did you take that to mean that he was replacing the gum with a whole piece each time he passed it on? I wasn't sure what to make of that. Shay having the page from the Gospel of Thomas makes it seem like he was manipulating the whole time but he did definitley seem to have some miraculous powers, which continued with Claire. Also why do you think Shay said he forgave June at the end? Because he knew she blamed him? Wasn't sure what to make of that.
I'm kind of sad I'm done with it, now I have a long time to wait before there's a new one!


Ok, I just finished Change of Heart. JP has such a way of surprising you at the end. I did really enjoy reading it, but as usual, I want more!

I was pleased to see a re-appearance of Ian Fletcher, a character I really enjoyed from 'Keeping Faith' and I was glad for his part in opening up the story. I was a little confused at the end when Father Michael opens up Shay's things and finds the page of the Gospel of Thomas - it seemed that all the religious talk before that, all the information on the Gnostic Gospels, etc. was pointless when Michael realizes that he's memorized a few lines.
I suspected the abuse the first time June meets with Shay when he says "She's better off" - I was afraid I knew what was coming. I almost wished that Shay had been more vindicated for that - that it would have really come out, but I think all in all, what was meant to happen, did.
The book could have gone on for about 50 more pages and I wouldn't have minded. I would have loved to see how it worked out with Maggie and Christian, what path Father Michael decided to take, and how Claire was doing (especially after the final few lines of the book!). Bottom line though - I'd read anything Jodi Picoult writes and I loved this book just as I've loved the others!

So far, I think this may be my favorite book.
The character I could relate to the most was Maggie, though I was frustrated by her low self-esteem. I got the impression that there was a lot of Jodi in Maggie...did anyone else think that?

PS, did anyone see the TV movie The Tenth Circle? I forgot to TiVo it but I heard it was pretty good - thoughts?!






I also felt gypped by the Green Mile plagersisms. It was way too similar to feel original at all.
I would have been happy without having Father Michael go through Shay's things. It didn't seem necessary to me to put that shadow of a doubt in our minds.
I think Shay forgave June because he knew she hated him and blamed him for taking her little girl's innocence. That is a big accusation.
"...how many of us had tried to forget something traumatic... only to find it printed on the back of our eyelids, tattooed on our tongues?"

He forgave her for that....
At least....that's what I got from his last words.


Keep reading, as always Jodi gets you thinking about hard ethical questions. You will see the twist in this book a little earlier than in some of her others
Rachael wrote: "I finished it all this weekend. Opinions? "

Yea I had problems with all the biblical references and the insitence on his being Jesus etc. But she puts this in perspective in a really interesting way at the end
Has an..."


This is also my fave by JP. It was actually the one I chose to read after "My Sister's Keeper", so it was one of my first. I feel as you all have mentioned about the similarities to "The Green Mile", and I also think- especially now that I am an avid JP reader- that it was almost beneath her. At the same time, it turned out to have plenty of differences and if that is what she had to do to create this most beautiful story, then I am so glad that she did. Britta- I agree with you about her being buried with Kurt. I don't think I could have allowed my child's body to stay in there with that man forever. And as far as the religious symbols go, I did feel kinda strange about that at first (as I am a Christian), but I realized that Shay himself doesn't honestly believe he is Jesus, though he is a similar martyr to give himself in death so that another might live. Also, there is a quote in the book by Voltaire that says "If God didn't exist, it would be necessary to invent Him." As I have been subject to people in the prison system, if anyone needs a shred of hope, it is these individuals. As much as we tend to think that all of them are hardened criminals, there are some people there who are innocent. There are some there who we can have sympathy for- people who murdered someone to save their children, etc. And in a place where all hope seems gone and compassion seems a thing of the past, it may just have been necessary for them to believe that Shay might be "Jesus-like", if only to hold hope in something. So maybe Shay was a martyr for more than just Claire. He put himself out there to be ridiculed just so he could give these men the hope they so desperately desired. I loved this book so very much. I can only hope that out of the many I have yet to read, I will find one that holds a candle to the way this one made me feel. And as for the ending, we all know that sometimes life doesn't give everyone a happy ending. This is the way it had to be, and if that was good enough for Shay, its good enough for me :)
PS: One other thing...what do the rest of you think about Shay having the picture of Father Michael? How do you suppose he got it?