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Loading... The Memory Keeper's Daughterby Kim Edwards
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won't like
will probably not like
will probably like
will like
will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. before i read this story, i havenot though a secret would ruin a family,would make a thing millions of different. what a secret could brought a terrible result was beyond my imagine.i though everyone own their secrets those secret kept the other from hurting, or protect themself not to be hurt,those kinds of secrets are unharmful. yet, in this story a secret is the root of tragedy. i dont like this sort of story, i mean those stories with miserable ending, or those stories made the reader a sort of sufocate during the reading.i havenot finished the story but i force myself to write something about it, i am not hoping when the reading end the feeling slip away and left me a blank brain,just like nonthing happened. at any rate, this is a fascinating novel. This is one of those books that I know I was supposed to like. And I really wanted to like it...I really wanted to like it, but I just could not. Ms. Edwards is desperately in need of an editor. It would have been such a better read if I did not have to trudge through so many paragraphs...pages...to get to the point. Great idea...just poorly executed. No reviews found. memorable book because the story is so unique. Strongly drawn characters.
Kim Edwards's debut novel is a winner, and those who read THE MEMORY KEEPER'S DAUGHTER are going to want to read her next one. Highly recommended.
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:23 -0400)
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The plot is pure soap opera. It's also about secrets and how they can control your life. A doctor, upon delivering his twins during a snowstorm in 1964, sees the telltale signs of Down's Syndrome in his baby girl and gives her to his nurse to bring to an institution, hoping to spare his wife the grief of raising a child he believes is doomed to a short, unhappy life. Their son is healthy and perfect and that should be enough, so he tells her their daughter died.
The nurse, however, can't bring herself to leave the baby in such a dreadful place, and secretly in love with the doctor and longing for a child of her own, takes the baby and moves away. The consequences of the doctor's decision and the nurse's act are what move the book through the next 25 years.
The doctor, David Henry, consumed with his never reconciled grief over his own sister's death at an early age and guilt over giving up Phoebe, grows estranged from his wife, Norah, and their son, Paul, losing himself in his work and in photography as he tries to capture life in pictures, seeking something he can't quite find.
Meanwhile, Caroline, the nurse, in trying to make a life for Phoebe, becomes a confident mother fighting for the education and rights of her child, finding love with a truck driver, while fighting the fear that David will find her and demand she return Phoebe to him.
The prose gets overly poetic at times and the plot often feels forced, manipulative, as things have to happen the way they do, coincidences and all, so things will work out as they do, but that didn't matter because the characters are so richly drawn in their pain and triumphs. The emotions ring true, even if I would've liked something a bit different at the end,which I don't want to mention because it will give too much away.
So, while I'm late to reading this book, if there are any of you out there who hasn't read it, I recommend it. And keep a tissue handy. (