Helpful Score: 5
this is a well written, moving and thought provoking look at these families and how they dealt with the death of a young husband and wife. I didn't like the ending, but overall liked the book.
Helpful Score: 3
very slow moving, couldnt get into it. Not like her other books that really grabbed me from the start. Maybe if I gave it more of a chance I would feel differently- but I just couldnt keep reading.
Helpful Score: 2
How we love and care for family and who makes up our family are at the heart of Jacquelyn Mitchard's book A Theory of Relativity. Do some people and do some laws consider adopted children less than full-fledged family members? The custody battle that takes center stage addresses wording in a statute that does not give adopted children the same rights as blood relatives.
For the most part, I found this to be a good book about an interesting family drama. I had trouble with aspects of the car crash that I don't want to spoil for those who have not read the novel. The ending was a bit too tidy. A recommended read.
For the most part, I found this to be a good book about an interesting family drama. I had trouble with aspects of the car crash that I don't want to spoil for those who have not read the novel. The ending was a bit too tidy. A recommended read.
Helpful Score: 2
Touching and believable. My favorite of Mitchard's novels.
Helpful Score: 2
I couldn't put this book down, and thoroughly enjoyed it. The ending was quite interesting and unexpected, which is a pleasure when it seems that lately you can guess the ending to almost every book.
Helpful Score: 2
If you are a Mitchard fan, then you will be moved by this novel. I felt it was a very moving and well written story.
Helpful Score: 2
I had trouble putting this down. A good story about two families seeking custody of a little girl.
Helpful Score: 1
Gordon McKenna is a handsome 24-year-old science teacher who thought life was as tough as it could get when his only sister, Georgia, was diagnosed with cancer. Then she and her husband die in a car crash, leaving behind their one-year-old daughter, Keefer. Gordon willingly gives up his self-involved bachelor life and adopts his beloved niece. Georgia's in-laws, however, have different wishes for their granddaughter. Well heeled, conservative and wealthy, they believe their born-again Christian niece and her husband should get custody of the child. Their challenge to Gordon's custody lies in the fact that both he and Georgia were adopted children, with "only" love, not blood, connecting Gordon and Keefer. Thus begins the custody battle which makes up the bulk of this book.
Helpful Score: 1
Jacqueln Mitchard's first novel, "The Deep End of the Ocean" launched Oprah Winfrey's book club and took the nation by storm.
This novel is a story about a feirce custody battle over a little girl. I won't ruin it for you, but her parents die in a horrid car accident at the beginning of the book, and then it follows her (the girl) through a nasty custody battle, clear to the end. Their are plot twists, and I was suprised how it ended.
This novel is a story about a feirce custody battle over a little girl. I won't ruin it for you, but her parents die in a horrid car accident at the beginning of the book, and then it follows her (the girl) through a nasty custody battle, clear to the end. Their are plot twists, and I was suprised how it ended.
Helpful Score: 1
If you like The Deep End of the Ocean, you will like this book. It is a story of a little girl caught between two families and all the deep emotions someone one has for their children, their grandchildren and our ability to do the right thing for the wrong reasons out of love.
A nice long book. Great for a road trip. I enjoyed getting to know these character's strengths and weaknesses.
This abridgement read by the author.
read the amazom reviews too much detail I don't often skip parts of a book but did with this one felt like "get on with it please" too much stuff about Gordon's escapades
An excellent exploration of what it means to be family. No easy answers here, just love and commitment, learning to accept.
Good writing, the kind that makes you really feel along with the characters.
Good writing, the kind that makes you really feel along with the characters.
A great read!!
Maybe this book particulary struck me because I related to parts of it, but I absolutely loved it!
I enjoyed listening to this book. This is the story of family and love.
She always writes such emotionally intense books. A beautiful story.
This is so well written that you actually become a part of this character's life; I loved how "real" everything was ... it wasn't written like a cheesy made-for-TV movie, it was reality, true to life: there are depressing parts to the story, but there are also down right funny and happy parts too! This is a great book ... it will make you look at your own life a little differently --at least it did for me. :)
A heartbreakingly good book. A wonderful exploration of the meaning of family. The characters were not well flushed out, but a good book all the same.
Unforgettable tale of love
Compelling and gripping
Powerful and compassionate reading!
The emotional story of a fierce custody battle for a little girl, this is a touching tale of love and the bonds that unite us all. By the author of "the Deep End of The Ocean"
The emotional story of a fierce custody battle over a little girl.
Lovely book by the author of "The Deep End of the Ocean".
Interesting premises on parenthood and relatedness. Invokes thought.
The emotional story of a fierce custody battle over a little girl.
Involves a custody battle for a little girl between parents. I enjoyed the and the initial book by this author.
An emotional story about an intense custody battle over a two-year-old girl.
I thought this book had a lot of interesting ideas (adopted children vs. blood children, what makes a family) but I didn't think the execution was very good. I felt disengaged from the characters and the idea of their story was more intriguing to me rather than how Mitchard wrote it (if that makes any sense). I struggled to finish and thought the ending was a bit pat.