Pulse en una miniatura para ir a Google Books.
Cargando... Other People's Children: A Novel (2021)por Jeff Hoffmann
Ninguno Cargando...
Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. I won this in a giveaway last year however was unable to get to it until now. This was a great book, I loved the different point of views that allowed us to see what each person was thinking. It really made you feel for and understand every persons situation. While reading I wasn’t sure what I wanted to happen, but the ending was great. I did want to know what happened after (pregnancy is ok? Jail time? Etc) but that’s just me wanting all books to end in a perfectly wrapped up box. ( ) This was an interesting book to say the least. It's about adoption and what a couple will do to keep this child. Gail and Jon couldn't conceive a child so they decide to adopt. Carli is the 18 year old girl who's pregnant and decides to give her child to them. Marla who's Carli's mother goes to all means to get the child back and they both decide they want to keep her. Things happen and it gets really crazy and sort of complicated. I didn't expect the ending in all ways with Carli and Gail and Jon. It made me think of what people will go through. If the first half of this book had taken up half the space it did, I think I would have really liked it. As it was, I read a quarter, then got distracted by several other books and came back. Once I hit the second half, however, the pace picked up rapidly and it was an easy read. But because it grew so quickly, I think we lost a lot of the emotional resonance it could have had. Jon and Paige were the only characters who I felt I really understood. Marla and Gail both felt like caricatures with little nuance (other than the knife aspect! Loved the knife aspect) and Carli felt like a placeholder. I liked that there was no obvious "right" side, but I didn't really find myself rooting for anyone regardless. Parenthood. Some people become parents biologically while others become parents through adoption. Some people are amazing parents while others really struggle. What makes a parent? And perhaps more importantly, what makes a good parent as versus a bad parent? Is it love? Is it some other intangible? Gail and Jon Durbin are beaten down by Gail's repeated miscarriages. They have arranged their whole lives to welcome a child, buying a house in the suburbs and setting up a nursery but the one thing they can't arrange is a pregnancy that doesn't end in loss and heartbreak. Gail is obsessive about becoming a mother while Jon, remembering his own childhood, is far more ambivalent about fatherhood. After much soul searching though, they decide to adopt. But this is one more process in creating a family that they don't have much control over. Carli is a pregnant teenager living a couple of towns away. She doesn't have a relationship with the father of her baby any more and she's pretty sure she's not ready to be anyone's mother, especially given the poor role model she has in her own mother, Marla. She wants to go to college and escape her mother and the unhappy life they live. So she decides to give the baby up for adoption and she chooses Gail and Jon to be the baby's parents. Their dreams are coming true even while Marla pressures Carli to keep her baby, thinking perhaps that she can atone for her own failings as a mother by helping raise her grandbaby. What happens to Gail and Jon's dreams if Carli listens to Marla and changes her mind? Who actually is little Maya's family? What lengths will any of them go to to keep this baby? This novel is both a domestic story about infertility and adoption as well as an on the run thriller. The narration shifts through each of the main characters so that the reader can sympathize with each of them, their hopes, dreams, fears, and motivations. There are right actions and wrong actions here but there's such a moral ambiguity that there's no clear and easy answer. Everyone is right and everyone is wrong. The story is an emotionally packed page turner, heartbreaking and tragic all the way round. If want and love makes a mother, both Gail and Carli are clearly mothers but only one of them can be Maya's mother. Carli's mother Marla is really the only clear villain here. The ending is a bit too perfect and hopeful after the wild ride that comes before it but overall Hoffmann has written an engrossing and moving story about love, adoption, parenthood, and ethics. Jon and Gail have been trying for years to have a child, but without success. They finally are chosen by a young girl, Carli, to be the parents to her baby. Prior to Carli signing the final commitment papers, Carli's mother pressures her to reclaim the child. Jon and Gail turn to desperate measures to try to keep the baby girl, Maya. This whole book was tragic, with a small glimmer of hope at the end. I despised Marla, Carli's mother, and her language was a bit over the top, but not surprising. This was hard to read because I have many friends who have successfully adopted children and have given the children a wonderful life. Carli had many obstacles ahead of her if she was to raise the child on her own. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
"A riveting debut novel about a couple whose dream of adopting a baby is shattered when the teenage mother reclaims her child"-- No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
Debates activosNingunoCubiertas populares
Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyClasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
¿Eres tú?Conviértete en un Autor de LibraryThing. |