Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Search - What Happened to my Sister

What Happened to my Sister
What Happened to my Sister
Author: Elizabeth Flock
9 yr old Carrie Parker & her mother, Libby, are making a fresh start in the small town of Hartsville, North Carolina, ready to put their turbulent past behind them. Violence has shattered their family & left Libby nearly unable to cope. & while Carrie once took comfort in her beloved sister, Emma, her mother has now forbidden even the mention of...  more »
ISBN: 394451
Publication Date: 2012
Pages: 286
Rating:
  ?

0 stars, based on 0 rating
Publisher: Random House
Book Type: Hardcover
Other Versions: Paperback
Members Wishing: 1
Reviews: Member | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

RockStarGirl avatar reviewed What Happened to my Sister on + 329 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This is a sequel to Me and Emma, and I highly suggest reading that book before starting this one. Without reading it first, this novel won't make a lot of sense.

I really enjoy Elizabeth Flock's writing style and the gritty characters she creates. I was excited to visit with Carrie again in this novel, and we meet some new characters who aren't quite as interesting but give Carrie a new perspective on the world.

Carrie did not have an easy life when we first met her in Me and Emma, and things have not improved for her in this novel. At times I became quite heartsick, thinking about all of the real Carries, out there living this way. While I gave Me and Emma 5 stars (and stand by that rating), What Happened to my Sister paled in comparison. It didn't have the shock factor that made Me and Emma so powerful, and the ending of Sister is a little too fairy-tale for me to consider it realistic. It was still a great book that I could not put down, and for that reason alone I would recommend giving it a read.
reviewed What Happened to my Sister on + 175 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
3.0 out of 5 stars - Secrets and lies

In this follow up to Me and Emma, Carrie (Caroline) Parker and her mother are finally leaving Hendersonville in the wake of her stepfather's murder. The plan is for the impoverished pair to make a new start in North Carolina, putting the sensational events of their past behind them. The caveat: Carrie is not allowed to mention the name of her sister, Emma. The sister that her mother says existed only in Carrie's imagination. Otherwise, her Momma says, Carrie will be sent off to the looney bin. Carrie revises her memories of Emma and tries to please her mother. The pair takes up residence in a run down motor lodge, The Loveless, and while Libby searches for a job, Carrie is left to scrounge for food. While loading up on croutons and ketchup at a local Wendy's restaurant, Carrie meets Honor and Cricket Ford. Apparently Carrie reminds them of a family member who died of cancer and the two little girls become instant friends. The Fords (who think they are related to Charlie Chaplin in a go-nowhere aside in the book) basically take care of Carrie and draw her into their grieving family group. What will happen when Libby finds out that Carrie is telling secrets to her new friend, Cricket? Secrets that can tear apart mother and daughter and bring to examination the details of their former life?

At this point, the book crosses into implausibility. The coincidences and the rest of the story were both predictable and unrealistic. The girls are supposed to be around 9 years old, but Cricket uses phrases and expressions (such as saying she made a "mental note" - supposedly she has a photographic memory and ADHD). The dialect as written for the character of Carrie was also annoying and inconsistently applied to speaking voice and internal dialog, but that is a personal opinion and perhaps others won't find it so. Carrie is supposed to be quite ignorant of the material world of the day and age (Ipods, computers, etc.) and also uneducated. The voices did not ring true to me as being that age.

Most of the book was a Hallmark movie cliche and I was quite disappointed in the direction it went and the ending.
Read All 6 Book Reviews of "What Happened to my Sister"

Please Log in to Rate these Book Reviews

MKSbooklady avatar reviewed What Happened to my Sister on + 989 more book reviews
The continuing story of Carrie and her mother. After Me and Emma, the book that knocked me over completely, this book picks up where it left off. Carrie will break your heart, several times, in this book. The Chaplin/Ford family has its own set of issues, but together these people have an amazing, sad, and stunning story. Read Me and Emma first.
sfc95 avatar reviewed What Happened to my Sister on + 686 more book reviews
This sequel starts out slow and it has been a while since I read the first book, me and Emma, although I never really forgot that one! I loved the first book, so much that I believe it to be my all time favorite so I was very excited about this book. When I first started reading it I felt like it dragged on, but it also retold some of the original story for which I was thankful, but half way through there was absolutely no putting it down. The characters are so well developed that it was easy to root for and against them and want desperately to know what happened to them. An excellent sequel to an excellent first book. A Must read, but read them in order or it will all be lost.
kdurham2813 avatar reviewed What Happened to my Sister on + 753 more book reviews
Check out the full review at Kritters Ramblings

This story picks up where Me & Emma ends, mother and daughter must pick up and move away from home and start somewhere new with nothing. As heart wrenching as it was to read the first book and the abuse, but with the men out of the picture, this book was better. Although her mother can be abusive, it wasn't as hard to read as the men in the first book.


Genres: