Mercy by Jodi Picoult

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(Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: April 2001
  • 416pp
  • Sales Rank: 4,303
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    Reader Rating: (60 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Dramatic" See All

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    • Overview
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: April 2001
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
    • Format: Paperback, 416pp
    • Sales Rank: 4,303

    Synopsis

    Cameron McDonald is the police chief of a small Massachusetts town. His cousin Jamie comes to him to confess outright that he has killed his terminally ill wife out of mercy. The murder trial plunges the town into upheaval.

    Publishers Weekly

    What could have been a competent, topical novel about a mercy killing becomes, in Picoult's (following Picture Perfect, 1995) hands, an inspired meditation on love. The setting is Wheelock, Mass., a slightly eccentric town where most of the residents are of Scottish descent, where weddings end in a blood vow, the name MacDonald is "painted on an alarming number of mailboxes" and police chief Cameron MacDonald doubles as clan chief and protector. On a seemingly ordinary day in Wheelock, Jamie MacDonald, a cousin of Cameron's, drives to the police station and announces: "My wife here, Maggie, is dead, and I'm the one who killed her." Cam finds himself saddled with a murder case and a conflict of interest: his cousin has given in to the pleas of his cancer-ravaged wife to kill her, and he's come to the clan chief to confess. But as police chief, Cam must also prosecute. On the same day, Cam's wife, Allie, the local florist, hires Mia, a violet-eyed beauty with a genius for flower arranging. Allie gets involved in Jamie's case, and Cam, who has spent his life in service to his community and his clan, falls in love with Mia and begins an affair that will bring his marriage to the breaking point and change it profoundly. Like Jamie, Allie is the marriage partner who loves more. "It's never fifty-fifty," says Jamie. As Jamie's court case proceeds, Picoult plumbs the emotional core of both marriages. The pace of the trial is slow, but Picoult pays loving attention to her central characters, fashioning a sensitive exploration of the balance of love. (Aug.)

    More Reviews and Recommendations

    Biography

    Known for expertly blending provocative themes with family conflicts and difficult moral choices, Jodi Picoult keeps her readers riveted with heartfelt yet impeccably researched novels, like the richly suspenseful Second Glance and the poignant and controversial family drama My Sister's Keeper.

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    Customer Reviews

    A Favoriteby KasWolf

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    October 21, 2009: I've read a lot of Picoult, and I never grow tired of her stories. Mercy, however, was especially well written. I really enjoyed the characters, their interactions and developments, the twists and turns of the story and especially the way she ties it all up at the end. I recommend this bood to anyone who has ever loved.

    Good.by Anonymous

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    September 19, 2009: The book was good. As far as originality goes, it's a story we've all heard in some form. My only complaint about the book would have to be the ending. I'm not sure what happened. Who knows? Maybe that was the way she intended it to be??? Either way, I still enjoyed the book.


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